Models for Modalities: Selected Essays

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The papers collected in this volume were written over a period of some eight or nine years, with some still earlier material incorporated in one of them. Publishing them under the same cover does not make a conĀ­ tinuous book of them. The papers are thematically connected with each other, however, in a way which has led me to think that they can naturally be grouped together. In any list of philosophically important concepts, those falling within the range of application of modal logic will rank high in interest. They include necessity, possibility, obligation, permission, knowledge, belief, perception, memory, hoping, and striving, to mention just a few of the more obvious ones. When a satisfactory semantics (in the sense of Tarski and Carnap) was first developed for modal logic, a fascinating new set of methods and ideas was thus made available for philosophical studies. The pioneers of this model theory of modality include prominently Stig Kanger and Saul Kripke. Several others were working in the same area independently and more or less concurrently. Some of the older papers in this collection, especially 'Quantification and Modality' and 'Modes of Modality', serve to clarify some of the main possibilities in the semantics of modal logics in general.

Author(s): Jaakko Hintikka
Series: Synthese Library 23
Publisher: D.Reidel
Year: 1969

Language: English
Pages: 231

Title ......Page 2
Copyright ......Page 3
Introduction ......Page 4
Contents ......Page 8
I. METHODOLOGICAL ORIENTATION ......Page 10
Epistemic Logic and the Methods of Philosophical Analysis ......Page 12
II. THE LOGIC OF EXISTENCE ......Page 30
Existential Presuppositions and Their Elimination ......Page 32
On the Logic of the Ontological Argument: Some Elementary Remarks ......Page 54
III. THE SEMANTICS OF MODALITY ......Page 64
Modality and Quantification ......Page 66
The Modes of Modality ......Page 80
Semantics for Propositional Attitudes ......Page 96
Existential Presuppositions and Uniqueness Presuppositions ......Page 121
IV. CONCEPTUAL ANALYSES ......Page 158
On the Logic of Perception ......Page 160
Deontic Logic and Its Philosophical Morals ......Page 193
Note on the Origin of the Different Essays ......Page 224
Index of Names ......Page 226
Index of Subjects ......Page 228