Logic without Model Theory (1994)
| Venue: | What is a Logical System |
| Citations: | 12 - 0 self |
BibTeX
@TECHREPORT{Kowalski94logicwithout,
author = {Robert Kowalski},
title = {Logic without Model Theory},
institution = {What is a Logical System},
year = {1994}
}
OpenURL
Abstract
Arguably, model theory serves two main functions: (1) to explain the relationship between language and experience, and (2) to specify the notion of logical consequence. In this paper I shall propose the notion of `knowledge assimilation', the assimilation of new information into a knowledge base, as an alternative understanding of the way in which a knowledge base formulated in logic relates to externally generated input sentences that describe experience. I shall argue that the notion of logical consequence can also be understood within a knowledge assimilation framework, in terms of sentences that must hold no matter what stream of input sentences might arise in the future. Classical model theory can be understood as dealing with static relationships among individuals. It leads naturally therefore to possible world semantics and modal logic, in which models are understood as related to one another by accessibility relations. I shall argue in favour of a non-model-theoretic alternativ...







