1st Edition

Understanding the Many

By Byeong Uk Yi Copyright 2002
    112 Pages
    by Routledge

    140 Pages
    by Routledge

    This book presents a mathematically and logically sophisticated analysis of the many, or the more than one. Covering issues of natural numbers, facts and their proper analysis, properties and their instantiation, as well as the logic of sets, this book elucidates one of the most debated concepts of the century.

    Introduction

    1. Plural Quantifications
    1. Singular Versus Plural Quantifications
    2. Implication
    2.a The Implication Argument
    2.b On the Three Theses on Implications
    2.c Implication Versus Metaphysical Necessity
    3. Paraphrase

    2. The Logic of Plurals
    1. Language
    1.a Elementary Notation
    *1.b. The Term Connective and
    1.c. Predicates
    1.c.i. Singular, Plural, and Neutral Predicates
    1.c.ii. Neutral Expansions and Singular Reducts
    1.c.iii. Logical Predicates
    1.d. Quantifiers and Variables
    1.d.i. Singular and Plural Quantifiers
    1.d.ii. Paraphrasing Plural Quantifiers
    1.d.iii. Singularizable Plural Quantifications
    1.e. The Canonical Notation for the Logic of Plurals
    1.e.i. Terms
    1.e.ii. Predicates and Simple Sentences
    1.e.iii. Quantifiers and Complex Sentences
    2. Logic
    2.a. The Logic of Plurals: Partial Axiomatization
    2.a.i. System A
    2.a.ii. System B
    2.a.iii. System C
    2.a.iv. System D
    *2.b. The Logic of Plurals: Model Theory
    Appendix: Partial Axiomatization of the Logic of Plurals

    3. Is Two a Property?
    1. Why Property Two?
    1.a. What Is It to Be a Property?
    1.b. Irregularities of Numerical Facts
    1.c. Why Not the Set Analysis?
    2. A Theory of Plural Properties
    2.a. The Predicative Part
    2.b. The Subject Part
    2.c. Instantiation
    2.d. Various Kinds of Plural Properties
    3. Two As an Intrinsic Plural Property
    4. Concluding Remarks

    4. What Numbers Should Be
    1. Are Numbers Objects?
    2. Plural Properties As Components of Numerical Facts
    3. Analysis of Numerical Facts
    4. Numbers Are Properties

    5. How Sets Are Determined by Their Members
    1. The Hierarchy of Sets and the Determination of Sets by Their Members
    2. Reference to Set-like Objects
    3. Plural Reference to Mundane Objects
    4. Exclusive Reference to Mundane Objects
    5. Concluding Remarks
    References
    Index

    Biography

    Byeong-uk Yi