[ont.events] SUNY Buffalo Logic Colloquium/Phil. of Logic

rapaport@cs.buffalo.EDU (William J. Rapaport) (11/20/87)

                STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT BUFFALO

                        BUFFALO LOGIC COLLOQUIUM

                             COLIN McLARTY

                        Department of Philosophy
                    Case Western Reserve University

                 NOTES TOWARD A NEW PHILOSOPHY OF LOGIC

Today, logic is generally conceived as, more or  less,  describing  pure
laws of thought.  But categorial logic has given an extensive, rigorous,
formalized version of the claim that logic is simply the most abstracted
aspect  of concrete knowledge.  In particular, different subject matters
may have different logics.

Categorial logic also urges a kind of structuralism:  A  subject  matter
(represented by a category) is seen as being determined by the relations
to be considered among objects rather than by any specification  of  the
individual constitutions of the objects.

These points are illustrated by two examples.  Differential geometry  is
one  abstract  representation of the world, one subject matter, with its
own non-classical logic.  Set theory is another,  later,  subject,  with
classical logic.  I discuss the way set theory was derived from geometry
in the 19th Century.

Other philosophic applications of topos theory are based on the idea  of
a  topos  as  a  world in which truth varies over a range of viewpoints,
which might be the situations of situation semantics or times  in  tense
logic.   All  these  considerations  together argue that there is no one
logic or one fundamental structure to the world.

                      Wednesday, December 2, 1987
                               4:00 P.M.
                    Diefendorf 8, Main Street Campus

For further  information, contact John Corcoran, (716) 636-2438.