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  1. The fixed points of belief and knowledge.Daniela Schuster - forthcoming - Logic Journal of the IGPL.
    Self-referential sentences have troubled our understanding of language for centuries. The most famous self-referential sentence is probably the Liar, a sentence that says of itself that it is false. The Liar Paradox has encouraged many philosophers to establish theories of truth that manage to give a proper account of the truth predicate in a formal language. Kripke’s Fixed Point Theory from 1975 is one famous example of such a formal theory of truth that aims at giving a plausible notion of (...)
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  • A Landscape of Logics beyond the Deduction Theorem.Bas C. van Fraassen - 2022 - Principia: An International Journal of Epistemology 26 (1):25-38.
    Philosophical issues often turn into logic. That is certainly true of Moore’s Paradox, which tends to appear and reappear in many philosophical contexts. There is no doubt that its study belongs to pragmatics rather than semantics or syntax. But it is also true that issues in pragmatics can often be studied fruitfully by attending to their projection, so to speak, onto the levels of semantics or syntax — just in the way that problems in spherical geometry are often illuminated by (...)
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  • La logique et le Soi : les suites de certaines crises de la pensée occidentale.Bas C. van Fraassen - 2010 - Diogène 232 (4):28.
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  • Logic and the Self: After Certain Crises in Western Thought.Bas C. van Fraassen - 2011 - Diogenes 58 (4):21-29.
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