Irving Anellis acabou de falecer - ver a seguir
lembro para as pessoas que nao estavam presente no UNILOG'2013
que o ano passado Anellis preparou um numero especial de Logica Universalis
para o centenario de Jean van Heijenoort com o qual ele fiz o doutorado:
http://link.springer.com/journal/11787/6/3/page/1
***********************************************************************************

It is with great sadness that I announce that Dr. Irving H. Anellis, a
long-time Contributing Editor and  Visiting Research Associate of the
Peirce Edition Project in the Institute for American Thought, has just
passed away. Dr. Anellis became a Contributing Editor for logic and
mathematics in 1989, and a Visiting Research Associate in 2008 after he
moved from Fort Dodge, Iowa to Indianapolis, Indiana. He taught
“Intermediate Symbolic Logic” and “Advanced Symbolic Logic” at IUPUI during
the Fall of 2009.

 With his passing we have lost one of the nation's preeminent historians of
logic and mathematics. Dr. Anellis received his Ph.D. in philosophy from
Brandeis University in 1977 with a dissertation on "Ontological Commitment
in Ideal Languages: Semantic Interpretations for Logical Positivism." Since
then, he built his reputation through a life entirely dedicated to
scholarship. We owe him more than 430 publications, among which four books
(including his 1994 *Jean van Heijenoort: Logic and Its History in the Work
and Writings of Jean van Heijenoort,* and his 2006 *Evaluating Bertrand
Russell, the Logician and His Work*); and 103 articles on the history of
logic, 211 reviews, abstracts, or notes, 36 edited works, and 78 pieces on
subjects as varied as psychology, philosophy of mind, artificial
intelligence, cognitive sciences, mental health, Soviet philosophy, history
of science, Russian and Soviet history and culture. A student of historian
of logic Jean van Heijenoort, Anellis's early research centered on
mathematical logic, in particular in proof theory and metamathematics, and
on applications of logic to algebraic structures, including Boolean
algebras and group theory. His recent historical research focused on the
work of Bertrand Russell in set theory and logic and of Charles Sanders
Peirce in algebra and algebraic logic; on the history of proof theory,
especially regarding the roles of the Löwenheim-Skolem Theorem and
Herbrand’s Fundamental Theorem; and on the history of logic and mathematics
in Russia. Dr. Anellis was also much interested in applications of
mathematics in linguistics, psychology, education, and in the logic of
mental acts, the logical formalization of intentionality, and the logic and
algebra of neural networks. His philosophical interests encompassed the
philosophy of logic and of mathematics, Austrian realism, phenomenology,
and logical positivism. He was the founding editor of the journal*Modern
Logic,* served as a reviewer or referee for numerous journals, and as a
contributor to several academic societies or commissions, including most
recently the advisory board of the Hilbert-Bernays Project.

 Irving Anellis was a modest and delightful person, sweet and humorous. His
was a life of service to knowledge, and the Peirce Project has immensely
benefited from his encyclopedic mind. Over the last few years Anellis wrote
hundreds of detailed annotations for our volume 11, which will contain the
22 chapters of Peirce's unpublished masterpiece, "How to Reason: A Critick
of Arguments" (1894). Anellis was far from finished with this painstaking
work, but the legacy he leaves us will make of this volume a monument to
his prodigious mastery of the entire history of logic. He was also working
on numerous other projects, including his long-planned magnum opus, "From
Algebraic Logic to Logistic," which was to be a summation of his work in
the history of logic, and a special essay on "The History and Development
of Mathematical Logic, from Descartes and Leibniz to the Present," to be
published in the Encyclopedia of Life Support Systems, UNESCO.

 One of Irving's favorite sayings was Peirce's remark, "One's special
knowledge of logic can be a painful cross to bear but duty demands that you
fulfill your calling." Irving bore such a cross and fulfilled its duty with
admirable resilience and simple grace. We shall long remain in his debt.

 André De Tienne

Director and General Editor, Peirce Edition Project
_______________________________________________
Logica-l mailing list
[email protected]
http://www.dimap.ufrn.br/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/logica-l

Responder a