Diamonds are a Philosopher's Best Friends |
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Authors: | Wansing Heinrich |
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Affiliation: | (1) Dresden University of Technology, Institute of Philosophy, 01062 Dresden, Germany |
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Abstract: | The knowability paradox is an instance of a remarkable reasoning pattern (actually, a pair of such patterns), in the course of which an occurrence of the possibility operator, the diamond, disappears. In the present paper, it is pointed out how the unwanted disappearance of the diamond may be escaped. The emphasis is not laid on a discussion of the contentious premise of the knowability paradox, namely that all truths are possibly known, but on how from this assumption the conclusion is derived that all truths are, in fact, known. Nevertheless, the solution offered is in the spirit of the constructivist attitude usually maintained by defenders of the anti-realist premise. In order to avoid the paradoxical reasoning, a paraconsistent constructive relevant modal epistemic logic with strong negation is defined semantically. The system is axiomatized and shown to be complete. |
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Keywords: | constructive negation epistemic logic knowability paradox modal logic paraconsistent logic relevance logic |
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