PHIL 6200 - Philosophy of Language and Logic


An examination of the relation of language to the world, and/or the philosophical basis of standard and nonstandard logics. Possible topics include the nature of reference and predication, the distinctions between a priori and a posteriori, between analytic and synthetic, and between necessary and contingent propositions, the roles of proper names, general terms, and pronouns, and the truth conditions of sentences, as well as questions concerning the philosophy of modal logic, tense logic, free logic, deontic logic, epistemic logic, paraconsistent logic, first and second order logics, and probability calculus.

Credits: 2 to 4 hours

Restrictions Graduate students must be admitted into the M.A. program, unless an exception is made by the department's Director of Graduate Studies.
Notes: May be repeated for credit, with advisor's approval, when topics vary. Open to graduate students only.


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