Logical Knowledge |
| |
Authors: | Ruth Weintraub |
| |
Affiliation: | Harvard University , Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA |
| |
Abstract: | It seems obvious that our beliefs are logically imperfect in two ways: they are neither deductively closed nor logically consistent. But this common-sense truism has been judged erroneous by some philosophers in the light of various arguments. In defence of common sense I consider and rebut interpretative arguments for logical perfection and show that the assumption espoused by common sense is theoretically superior, and capable - unlike its rival - of accounting for the informativeness of mathematics. Finally, I suggest that common sense opens the way to genuine disputes about the correct logic. |
| |
Keywords: | Logic Knowledge Interpretation Mathematics |
|
|