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  1. Language in action.Johan Van Benthem - 1991 - Journal of Philosophical Logic 20 (3):225-263.
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  • (1 other version)On the calculus of relations.Alfred Tarski - 1941 - Journal of Symbolic Logic 6 (3):73-89.
    The logical theory which is called thecalculus of (binary) relations, and which will constitute the subject of this paper, has had a strange and rather capricious line of historical development. Although some scattered remarks regarding the concept of relations are to be found already in the writings of medieval logicians, it is only within the last hundred years that this topic has become the subject of systematic investigation. The first beginnings of the contemporary theory of relations are to be found (...)
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  • The origin of relation algebras in the development and axiomatization of the calculus of relations.Roger D. Maddux - 1991 - Studia Logica 50 (3-4):421 - 455.
    The calculus of relations was created and developed in the second half of the nineteenth century by Augustus De Morgan, Charles Sanders Peirce, and Ernst Schröder. In 1940 Alfred Tarski proposed an axiomatization for a large part of the calculus of relations. In the next decade Tarski's axiomatization led to the creation of the theory of relation algebras, and was shown to be incomplete by Roger Lyndon's discovery of nonrepresentable relation algebras. This paper introduces the calculus of relations and the (...)
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  • Groups and algebras of binary relations.Steven Givant & Hajnal Andréka - 2002 - Bulletin of Symbolic Logic 8 (1):38-64.
    In 1941, Tarski published an abstract, finitely axiomatized version of the theory of binary relations, called the theory of relation algebras, He asked whether every model of his abstract theory could be represented as a concrete algebra of binary relations. He and Jonsson obtained some initial, positive results for special classes of abstract relation algebras. But Lyndon showed, in 1950, that in general the answer to Tarski's question is negative. Monk proved later that the answer remains negative even if one (...)
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  • A new foundation for the theory of relations.Stephen D. Comer - 1983 - Notre Dame Journal of Formal Logic 24 (2):181-187.
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  • A representation theorem for measurable relation algebras.Steven Givant & Hajnal Andréka - 2018 - Annals of Pure and Applied Logic 169 (11):1117-1189.
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  • The variety of coset relation algebras.Steven Givant & Hajnal Andréka - 2018 - Journal of Symbolic Logic 83 (4):1595-1609.
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