Steven,
I only very quickly scanned the abstract that you linked to, and would
ask: With mereology characterized as a theory of collective sets (in
opposition to the Cantorian notion of set), and with collective sets
defined by means of the part of relation, such that mereology can be
described
Dear Irving,
The answer is maybe. I have not spent enough time with Lesniewski's work to
say at this point, it's certainly relevant. This and Tarski's work on
cylindrical logic are only recently upon my horizon and I am not confident that
I will have anything useful to say about either in
Steven,
Having only your abstract to go on, I can certainly recognize
perennial themes out of Peirce's school, but they have been just
as perennially met with incomprehension as they have been brought
to the general lack of attention. Most notable among those themes
is no doubt the
Dear List,
I am giving a presentation at CiE 2012 in Cambridge (England) in June that may
interest list members:
Conceptions Of Locality In Logic And Computation, A History
http://iase.info/conceptions-of-locality-in-logic-and-computat
Your review welcome.
With respect,
Steven
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