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If Logic, Definitions and the Vicious Circle Principle
Authors:Jaakko Hintikka
Affiliation:1. Department of Philosophy, Boston University, 745 Commonwealth ave., Boston, MA, 02215-1401, USA
2. Collegium for Advanced Studies, University of Helsinki, Fabianinkatu 24, P.O. Box?4, 00014, Helsinki, Finland
Abstract:In a definition (∀x)((xєr)↔D[x]) of the set r, the definiens D[x] must not depend on the definiendum r. This implies that all quantifiers in D[x] are independent of r and of (∀x). This cannot be implemented in the traditional first-order logic, but can be expressed in IF logic. Violations of such independence requirements are what created the typical paradoxes of set theory. Poincaré’s Vicious Circle Principle was intended to bar such violations. Russell nevertheless misunderstood the principle; for him a set a can depend on another set b only if (bєa) or (b ⊆ a). Likewise, the truth of an ordinary first-order sentence with the G?del number of r is undefinable in Tarki’s sense because the quantifiers of the definiens depend unavoidably on r.
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