58 research outputs found
"Ultimate" facts? Zalabardo on the metaphysics of truth
A Comment on a Forthcoming article by José Zalabardo on the Tractatus Picture Theory's origins in Wittgenstein's reactions to Russell's Multiple Relation theory of Judgment and Truth. For a special issue of the Australasian Philosophical Review
Parikh and Wittgenstein
A survey of Parikhâs philosophical appropriations of Wittgensteinian themes, placed into historical context against the backdrop of Turingâs famous paper, âOn computable numbers, with an application to the Entscheidungsproblemâ (Turing in Proc Lond Math Soc 2(42): 230â265, 1936/1937) and its connections with Wittgenstein and the foundations of mathematics. Characterizing Parikhâs contributions to the interaction between logic and philosophy at its foundations, we argue that his work gives the lie to recent presentations of Wittgensteinâs so-called metaphilosophy (e.g., Horwich in Wittgensteinâs metaphilosophy. Oxford University Press, Oxford, 2012) as a kind of âdead endâ quietism. From early work on the idea of a feasibility in arithmetic (Parikh in J Symb Log 36(3):494â508, 1971) and vagueness (Parikh in Logic, language and method. Reidel, Boston, pp 241â261, 1983) to his more recent program in social software (Parikh in Advances in modal logic, vol 2. CSLI Publications, Stanford, pp 381â400, 2001a), Parikhâs work encompasses and touches upon many foundational issues in epistemology, philosophy of logic, philosophy of language, and value theory. But it expresses a unified philosophical point of view. In his most recent work, questions about public and private languages, opportunity spaces, strategic voting, non-monotonic inference and knowledge in literature provide a remarkable series of suggestions about how to present issues of fundamental importance in theoretical computer science as serious philosophical issues
Chains of life: Turing, Lebensform, and the emergence of Wittgensteinâs later style
This essay accounts for the notion of Lebensform by assigning it a logical role in Wittgensteinâs later philosophy. Wittgensteinâs additions of the notion to his manuscripts of the PI occurred during the initial drafting of the book 1936-7, after he abandoned his effort to revise The Brown Book. It is argued that this constituted a substantive step forward in his attitude toward the notion of simplicity as it figures within the notion of logical analysis. Next, a reconstruction of his later remarks on Lebensformen is offered which factors in his reading of Alan Turingâs âOn computable numbers, with an application to the Entscheidungsproblemâ (1936/7), as well as his discussions with Turing 1937-1939. An interpretation of the five occurrences of Lebensform in the PI is then given in terms of a logical âregressionâ to Lebensform as a fundamental notion. This regression characterizes Wittgensteinâs mature answer to the question, âWhat is the nature of the logical?
Geodetic constraints on cratonic microplates and broad strain during rifting of thick Southern African lithosphere
Southern Africa is typically considered to belong to a single tectonic plate, Nubia, despite active faulting along the southwestern branch of the East African Rift System. We analyze regional Global Navigation Satellite System (GNSS) measurements, and find that the âSanâ microplate, situated south of the southwestern branch of the East African Rift, is statistically distinct from Nubia, with 0.4â0.7 mm/yr of extension across the boundary. Adding nine new campaign GNSS sites, we show that the extension rate across the southern Malawi Rift is 2.2 ± 0.3 mm/yr, with 75% of the relative velocity occurring over 890 km, despite the surface expression of faulting being <150 km wide. Thus, for the first time, we use geodetic measurements to describe the accommodation of strain in broad zones between Archean cratons in southern Africa's thick continental lithosphere
Recommended from our members
Organisational strategies and midwives' readiness to provide care for out of hospital births: An analysis from the Birthplace organisational case studies
Objective: the objective of the Birthplace in England Case Studies was to explore the organisational and professional issues that may impact on the quality and safety of labour and birth care in different birth settings: Home, Freestanding Midwifery Unit, Alongside Midwifery Unit or Obstetric Unit. This analysis examines the factors affecting the readiness of community midwives to provide women with choice of out of hospital birth, using the findings from the Birthplace in England Case Studies.
Design: organisational ethnographic case studies, including interviews with professionals, key stakeholders, women and partners, observations of service processes and document review.
Setting: a maximum variation sample of four maternity services in terms of configuration, region and population characteristics. All were selected from the Birthplace cohort study sample as services scoring âbestâ or âbetterâ performing in the Health Care Commission survey of maternity services (HCC 2008).
Participants: professionals and stakeholders (n=86), women (64), partners (6), plus 50 observations and 200 service documents.
Findings: each service experienced challenges in providing an integrated service to support choice of place of birth. Deployment of community midwives was a particular concern. Community midwives and managers expressed lack of confidence in availability to cover home birth care in particular, with the exception of caseload midwifery and a âhub and spokeâ model of care. Community midwives and women's interviews indicated that many lacked home birth experience and confidence. Those in midwifery units expressed higher levels of support and confidence.
Key conclusions and implications for practice: maternity services need to consider and develop models for provision of a more integrated model of staffing across hospital and community boundaries
- âŠ