Editore: Associated Chambers of Commerce and Industry of India
Da: Majestic Books, Hounslow, Regno Unito
EUR 6,63
Quantità: 4 disponibili
Aggiungi al carrelloCondizione: New. 33 Leaves.
Editore: Mikroskopie (Wien), 38, 228-240 (1999.,, 1999
Da: Antiquariat Petri, Jena, Germania
EUR 7,00
Quantità: 1 disponibili
Aggiungi al carrelloSC. Condizione: Gut. Obr., 12s., in gutem Zustand, [SDA1]. Deu 300g.
Lingua: Inglese
Editore: CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform, 2017
ISBN 10: 1540374130 ISBN 13: 9781540374134
Da: -OnTimeBooks-, Phoenix, AZ, U.S.A.
Condizione: very_good. Polley, P.; Modal, C. (illustratore). Gently read. May have name of previous ownership, or ex-library edition. Binding tight; spine straight and smooth, with no creasing; covers clean and crisp. Minimal signs of handling or shelving. 100% GUARANTEE! Shipped with delivery confirmation, if you're not satisfied with purchase please return item! Ships USPS Media Mail.
Editore: Prestige Records, USA, 1968
Da: Victoria Bookshop, BERE ALSTON, DEVON, Regno Unito
EUR 21,08
Quantità: 1 disponibili
Aggiungi al carrelloHardcover. Condizione: G+. Re-issue. This is NOT a book! LP (vinyl) record 33.3 rpm. A re-issue of their first album, originally issued in 1964. Sleeve a little worn at edges and needs glueing at top edge, record appears to be very good, with no visible marks or scratches, but we have not played it. Book.
Editore: Dunhill / ABC Records, New York, 1969
Da: Between the Covers-Rare Books, Inc. ABAA, Gloucester City, NJ, U.S.A.
Prima edizione
Softcover. Condizione: Very Good. Original 33 1/3 rpm stereo vinyl album. Some scratches and wear from playing that may partially affect playback on side B, still very good in a very good illustrated cardboard sleeve with rubbing and bumping. DSX 50063.
Da: Herman H. J. Lynge & Søn ILAB-ABF, Copenhagen, Danimarca
Prima edizione
EUR 688,97
Quantità: 1 disponibili
Aggiungi al carrello(No place), The Association for Symbolic Logic, 1959. 8vo. Wrappers blank with printed title on spine. Entire issue No. 1 of vol. 24, offered. Fine and clean. The seminal first printing of Kripke's debut article, which provided the basis for his logic and for the model theory for modal logic in general. The work constitutes the very beginning of Kripke Semantics (often called possible world semantics). Kripke's works in general are rare in fist editions. Many of them remain unpublished and are only known in privately circulated manuscripts.The American philosopher Saul A. Kripke (born 1940) is an exceedingly important logician and philosopher of language and one of the most powerful and influential thinkers of analytic and Anglo-American philosophy. He is considered the greatest living philosopher and perhaps the greatest since Wittgenstein. In 2001 he was awarded the Schock Prize in Logic and Philosophy, which is considered the philosopical equivalent of the Nobel Prize.Kripke, who grew up in Omaha in a religious Jewish family, was somewhat of a prodigy child. During grammar school he got intimately acquainted with and mastered to perfection algebra, geometry and calculus, and very early on he took up philosophy, which later became his career. Still a teenager, in high school, he wrote a work that was to change the face of philosophical logic forever, namely the groundbreaking paper "A Completeness Theorem for Modal Logic", which was printed a few years later, in 1959, in the Journal of Symbolic Logic, while he was in his first year at Harvard University. This seminal debut work proposed what later came to be known as Kripke models for modal logic. The story goes that the paper earned a letter from the department of mathematics urging Kripke to apply for a job there, to which he is said to have written an answer explaining "My mother said that I should finish high school and go to college first."In 1962 he graduated from Harvard University, where he remained until 1968, first as a member of the Harvard Society of Fellows and then as a lecturer. During these years he developed the logical theories founded in the "Completeness Theorem" further and made seminal contributions to the field of logic and semantics. Kripke Semantics is a formal semantics for non-classical logic systems that Kripke began developing in his teenage years, first published something on in 1959 (the present work) and further developed in the 60'ies and. The development of Kripke Semantics was no less than a breakthrough in the making of non-classical logics, of which no model theory existed before Kripke's. With this work, Kripke laid the foundation for proving completeness theorems for modal logic, and for identifying the weakest normal modal logic, which is now named K after him.