Logic in Central and Eastern Europe
History, Science, and Discourse
Herausgeber: Schumann, Andrew
Logic in Central and Eastern Europe
History, Science, and Discourse
Herausgeber: Schumann, Andrew
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This book is a collection of rare material regarding logical and analytic-philosophical traditions in Central and Eastern European countries, covering the period from the late nineteenth century to the early twenty-first century. An encyclopedic feature covers the history of logic and analytic philosophy in all European post-Socialist countries.
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This book is a collection of rare material regarding logical and analytic-philosophical traditions in Central and Eastern European countries, covering the period from the late nineteenth century to the early twenty-first century. An encyclopedic feature covers the history of logic and analytic philosophy in all European post-Socialist countries.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: University Press of America
- Seitenzahl: 760
- Erscheinungstermin: 14. Dezember 2012
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 152mm x 40mm
- Gewicht: 1080g
- ISBN-13: 9780761858911
- ISBN-10: 0761858911
- Artikelnr.: 35346280
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
- Verlag: University Press of America
- Seitenzahl: 760
- Erscheinungstermin: 14. Dezember 2012
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 152mm x 40mm
- Gewicht: 1080g
- ISBN-13: 9780761858911
- ISBN-10: 0761858911
- Artikelnr.: 35346280
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
Andrew Schumann is associate professor at the Department of Philosophy and Science Methodology at the Belarusian State University, Minsk, Belarus. His research focuses on logic and philosophy of science with an emphasis on non-well-founded phenomena: self-references and circularity. He contributed mainly to such research areas as reasoning under uncertainty, probability reasoning, non-Archimedean mathematics, as well as their applications to cognitive science.
Preface
Introduction
Chapter One. The Logical Discourse and the Modern Cultural Climate
Nijaz Ibrulj. National Dogmatism or the Logic of Consociation?
Gëzim Alpion. European Media and 'Outsiders' within-Contemporary
Repre-sentations of Albania in the British Press
Olga Breskaya, Oleg Bresky. University in Belarus: the Grounds and the
Pros-pects
Valentin A. Bazhanov. The Logical Community in the USSR and Modern Rus-sia:
The Furrow Syndrome
Chapter Two. The Cultivation of Logical Traditions: the Beginning
Nijaz Ibrulj. Bosnia Porphyriana: An Outline of the Development of Logic in
Bosnia and Herzegovina
Marin Turlea. Ideological and Philosophical Aspects of Logical Tradition in
Romania
Iryna Khomenko. Logic in Kyiv Theological Academy (1819-1920)
Romanas Pleckaitis.The Development of Logic in Lithuania
Chapter Three. The Cross-cultural Context of Logical Traditions
Roman Murawski. Philosophy of Mathematics in Poland in the 20th Century
Tõnu Tamme. Logic in Estonia
Aleks Knoks & Jurgis Skilters. Logic in Latvia
Stanislovas Norgela. Mathematical Logic in Lithuania
Andrej Ule. Logic and Theory of Science in Slovenia
András Máté, Hajnal Andréka, István Németi. The Development of Symbolic
Logic in Hungary
Violeta Panzova. Logic in Macedonia
Svetlana Zecevic. The Tendencies of Logic and Methodology in Montenegro
Chapter Four. The Traditions of Analytic Philosophy, Philosophy of Sci-ence
and Philosophical Logic
Ilie Pârvu, Andreea Esanu. Analytic Philosophy in Romania
Péter Szegedi. Philosophy of Science in Hungary
Matjaz Potrc & Vojko Strahovnik. Some Tendencies of Logic and Methodology
in Slovenia
Jirí Raclavský. On the Czech Logic in the 20th Century
Martin Tabakov. The Development of Philosophical Logic in Bulgaria
Chapter Five. Some Significant Results in Modern Logic
Alexander S. Karpenko. Moscow Logical Schools (Period of Ideology
1917-1991)
Grigori Mints, Sergey I. Nikolenko. History of the Leningrad (St.
Petersburg) School of Constructive Mathematics and Proof Theory
Sergey I. Nikolenko. The Markov School in the 21st Century
Alexander Lyaletski, Marina Morokhovets, Andrei Paskevich. Kyiv School of
Automated Theorem Proving: a Historical Chronicle
Mirjana Borisavljevic, Silvia Ghilezan, Predrag Janicic, Aleksandar Krapez,
Milos Kurilic, Zarko Mijajlovic, Zoran Markovic, Zoran Ognjanovic, Jovanka
Pantovic, Zoran Petric, Miomir S. Stankovic, Radomir S. Stankovic, Ivan
Sto-jmenovic, Djordje Vukomanovic. History of Mathematical Logic in Serbia
Srecko Kovac, Berislav Zarnic. An Outline of the History of the Croatian
Logic
Vilém Novák. A Concise Glance at the History of Fuzzy Logic in Czechia
(with a glimpse of the origin of data-mining-the GUHA method)
Marián Zouhar. On Some Slovak Contributions to Non-Classical Logics
Martin Tabakov. The Development of Mathematical Logic in Bulgaria
Chapter Six. Dialectical Logic and Informal-Logical Philosophy of Sci-ence
Andrey Maidansky. The Concept of Truth in Ilyenkov's Dialectical Logic
Anguel S. Stefanov. Philosophy of Science in Bulgaria
Herbert Hörz. Science of Science in the German Democratic Republic. Remarks
of a Contemporary Witness
János Laki. The Role of Informal Logic in the Kuhnian Scientific Change
János Laki. Versions of Externalism. Hungarian Contributions to the
Post-Positivist Philosophy of Science
Chapter Seven. The History of Logic as Histories of People
Jan Wolenski. The Story of a Footnote
Vitaly I. Levin. Victor Ivanovich Shestakov, the Scientist and Person
Vitaly I. Levin. Sofia Alexandrovna Yanovskaya, the Person, Teacher, and
Sci-entist
Index
About the Contributors
Introduction
Chapter One. The Logical Discourse and the Modern Cultural Climate
Nijaz Ibrulj. National Dogmatism or the Logic of Consociation?
Gëzim Alpion. European Media and 'Outsiders' within-Contemporary
Repre-sentations of Albania in the British Press
Olga Breskaya, Oleg Bresky. University in Belarus: the Grounds and the
Pros-pects
Valentin A. Bazhanov. The Logical Community in the USSR and Modern Rus-sia:
The Furrow Syndrome
Chapter Two. The Cultivation of Logical Traditions: the Beginning
Nijaz Ibrulj. Bosnia Porphyriana: An Outline of the Development of Logic in
Bosnia and Herzegovina
Marin Turlea. Ideological and Philosophical Aspects of Logical Tradition in
Romania
Iryna Khomenko. Logic in Kyiv Theological Academy (1819-1920)
Romanas Pleckaitis.The Development of Logic in Lithuania
Chapter Three. The Cross-cultural Context of Logical Traditions
Roman Murawski. Philosophy of Mathematics in Poland in the 20th Century
Tõnu Tamme. Logic in Estonia
Aleks Knoks & Jurgis Skilters. Logic in Latvia
Stanislovas Norgela. Mathematical Logic in Lithuania
Andrej Ule. Logic and Theory of Science in Slovenia
András Máté, Hajnal Andréka, István Németi. The Development of Symbolic
Logic in Hungary
Violeta Panzova. Logic in Macedonia
Svetlana Zecevic. The Tendencies of Logic and Methodology in Montenegro
Chapter Four. The Traditions of Analytic Philosophy, Philosophy of Sci-ence
and Philosophical Logic
Ilie Pârvu, Andreea Esanu. Analytic Philosophy in Romania
Péter Szegedi. Philosophy of Science in Hungary
Matjaz Potrc & Vojko Strahovnik. Some Tendencies of Logic and Methodology
in Slovenia
Jirí Raclavský. On the Czech Logic in the 20th Century
Martin Tabakov. The Development of Philosophical Logic in Bulgaria
Chapter Five. Some Significant Results in Modern Logic
Alexander S. Karpenko. Moscow Logical Schools (Period of Ideology
1917-1991)
Grigori Mints, Sergey I. Nikolenko. History of the Leningrad (St.
Petersburg) School of Constructive Mathematics and Proof Theory
Sergey I. Nikolenko. The Markov School in the 21st Century
Alexander Lyaletski, Marina Morokhovets, Andrei Paskevich. Kyiv School of
Automated Theorem Proving: a Historical Chronicle
Mirjana Borisavljevic, Silvia Ghilezan, Predrag Janicic, Aleksandar Krapez,
Milos Kurilic, Zarko Mijajlovic, Zoran Markovic, Zoran Ognjanovic, Jovanka
Pantovic, Zoran Petric, Miomir S. Stankovic, Radomir S. Stankovic, Ivan
Sto-jmenovic, Djordje Vukomanovic. History of Mathematical Logic in Serbia
Srecko Kovac, Berislav Zarnic. An Outline of the History of the Croatian
Logic
Vilém Novák. A Concise Glance at the History of Fuzzy Logic in Czechia
(with a glimpse of the origin of data-mining-the GUHA method)
Marián Zouhar. On Some Slovak Contributions to Non-Classical Logics
Martin Tabakov. The Development of Mathematical Logic in Bulgaria
Chapter Six. Dialectical Logic and Informal-Logical Philosophy of Sci-ence
Andrey Maidansky. The Concept of Truth in Ilyenkov's Dialectical Logic
Anguel S. Stefanov. Philosophy of Science in Bulgaria
Herbert Hörz. Science of Science in the German Democratic Republic. Remarks
of a Contemporary Witness
János Laki. The Role of Informal Logic in the Kuhnian Scientific Change
János Laki. Versions of Externalism. Hungarian Contributions to the
Post-Positivist Philosophy of Science
Chapter Seven. The History of Logic as Histories of People
Jan Wolenski. The Story of a Footnote
Vitaly I. Levin. Victor Ivanovich Shestakov, the Scientist and Person
Vitaly I. Levin. Sofia Alexandrovna Yanovskaya, the Person, Teacher, and
Sci-entist
Index
About the Contributors
Preface
Introduction
Chapter One. The Logical Discourse and the Modern Cultural Climate
Nijaz Ibrulj. National Dogmatism or the Logic of Consociation?
Gëzim Alpion. European Media and 'Outsiders' within-Contemporary
Repre-sentations of Albania in the British Press
Olga Breskaya, Oleg Bresky. University in Belarus: the Grounds and the
Pros-pects
Valentin A. Bazhanov. The Logical Community in the USSR and Modern Rus-sia:
The Furrow Syndrome
Chapter Two. The Cultivation of Logical Traditions: the Beginning
Nijaz Ibrulj. Bosnia Porphyriana: An Outline of the Development of Logic in
Bosnia and Herzegovina
Marin Turlea. Ideological and Philosophical Aspects of Logical Tradition in
Romania
Iryna Khomenko. Logic in Kyiv Theological Academy (1819-1920)
Romanas Pleckaitis.The Development of Logic in Lithuania
Chapter Three. The Cross-cultural Context of Logical Traditions
Roman Murawski. Philosophy of Mathematics in Poland in the 20th Century
Tõnu Tamme. Logic in Estonia
Aleks Knoks & Jurgis Skilters. Logic in Latvia
Stanislovas Norgela. Mathematical Logic in Lithuania
Andrej Ule. Logic and Theory of Science in Slovenia
András Máté, Hajnal Andréka, István Németi. The Development of Symbolic
Logic in Hungary
Violeta Panzova. Logic in Macedonia
Svetlana Zecevic. The Tendencies of Logic and Methodology in Montenegro
Chapter Four. The Traditions of Analytic Philosophy, Philosophy of Sci-ence
and Philosophical Logic
Ilie Pârvu, Andreea Esanu. Analytic Philosophy in Romania
Péter Szegedi. Philosophy of Science in Hungary
Matjaz Potrc & Vojko Strahovnik. Some Tendencies of Logic and Methodology
in Slovenia
Jirí Raclavský. On the Czech Logic in the 20th Century
Martin Tabakov. The Development of Philosophical Logic in Bulgaria
Chapter Five. Some Significant Results in Modern Logic
Alexander S. Karpenko. Moscow Logical Schools (Period of Ideology
1917-1991)
Grigori Mints, Sergey I. Nikolenko. History of the Leningrad (St.
Petersburg) School of Constructive Mathematics and Proof Theory
Sergey I. Nikolenko. The Markov School in the 21st Century
Alexander Lyaletski, Marina Morokhovets, Andrei Paskevich. Kyiv School of
Automated Theorem Proving: a Historical Chronicle
Mirjana Borisavljevic, Silvia Ghilezan, Predrag Janicic, Aleksandar Krapez,
Milos Kurilic, Zarko Mijajlovic, Zoran Markovic, Zoran Ognjanovic, Jovanka
Pantovic, Zoran Petric, Miomir S. Stankovic, Radomir S. Stankovic, Ivan
Sto-jmenovic, Djordje Vukomanovic. History of Mathematical Logic in Serbia
Srecko Kovac, Berislav Zarnic. An Outline of the History of the Croatian
Logic
Vilém Novák. A Concise Glance at the History of Fuzzy Logic in Czechia
(with a glimpse of the origin of data-mining-the GUHA method)
Marián Zouhar. On Some Slovak Contributions to Non-Classical Logics
Martin Tabakov. The Development of Mathematical Logic in Bulgaria
Chapter Six. Dialectical Logic and Informal-Logical Philosophy of Sci-ence
Andrey Maidansky. The Concept of Truth in Ilyenkov's Dialectical Logic
Anguel S. Stefanov. Philosophy of Science in Bulgaria
Herbert Hörz. Science of Science in the German Democratic Republic. Remarks
of a Contemporary Witness
János Laki. The Role of Informal Logic in the Kuhnian Scientific Change
János Laki. Versions of Externalism. Hungarian Contributions to the
Post-Positivist Philosophy of Science
Chapter Seven. The History of Logic as Histories of People
Jan Wolenski. The Story of a Footnote
Vitaly I. Levin. Victor Ivanovich Shestakov, the Scientist and Person
Vitaly I. Levin. Sofia Alexandrovna Yanovskaya, the Person, Teacher, and
Sci-entist
Index
About the Contributors
Introduction
Chapter One. The Logical Discourse and the Modern Cultural Climate
Nijaz Ibrulj. National Dogmatism or the Logic of Consociation?
Gëzim Alpion. European Media and 'Outsiders' within-Contemporary
Repre-sentations of Albania in the British Press
Olga Breskaya, Oleg Bresky. University in Belarus: the Grounds and the
Pros-pects
Valentin A. Bazhanov. The Logical Community in the USSR and Modern Rus-sia:
The Furrow Syndrome
Chapter Two. The Cultivation of Logical Traditions: the Beginning
Nijaz Ibrulj. Bosnia Porphyriana: An Outline of the Development of Logic in
Bosnia and Herzegovina
Marin Turlea. Ideological and Philosophical Aspects of Logical Tradition in
Romania
Iryna Khomenko. Logic in Kyiv Theological Academy (1819-1920)
Romanas Pleckaitis.The Development of Logic in Lithuania
Chapter Three. The Cross-cultural Context of Logical Traditions
Roman Murawski. Philosophy of Mathematics in Poland in the 20th Century
Tõnu Tamme. Logic in Estonia
Aleks Knoks & Jurgis Skilters. Logic in Latvia
Stanislovas Norgela. Mathematical Logic in Lithuania
Andrej Ule. Logic and Theory of Science in Slovenia
András Máté, Hajnal Andréka, István Németi. The Development of Symbolic
Logic in Hungary
Violeta Panzova. Logic in Macedonia
Svetlana Zecevic. The Tendencies of Logic and Methodology in Montenegro
Chapter Four. The Traditions of Analytic Philosophy, Philosophy of Sci-ence
and Philosophical Logic
Ilie Pârvu, Andreea Esanu. Analytic Philosophy in Romania
Péter Szegedi. Philosophy of Science in Hungary
Matjaz Potrc & Vojko Strahovnik. Some Tendencies of Logic and Methodology
in Slovenia
Jirí Raclavský. On the Czech Logic in the 20th Century
Martin Tabakov. The Development of Philosophical Logic in Bulgaria
Chapter Five. Some Significant Results in Modern Logic
Alexander S. Karpenko. Moscow Logical Schools (Period of Ideology
1917-1991)
Grigori Mints, Sergey I. Nikolenko. History of the Leningrad (St.
Petersburg) School of Constructive Mathematics and Proof Theory
Sergey I. Nikolenko. The Markov School in the 21st Century
Alexander Lyaletski, Marina Morokhovets, Andrei Paskevich. Kyiv School of
Automated Theorem Proving: a Historical Chronicle
Mirjana Borisavljevic, Silvia Ghilezan, Predrag Janicic, Aleksandar Krapez,
Milos Kurilic, Zarko Mijajlovic, Zoran Markovic, Zoran Ognjanovic, Jovanka
Pantovic, Zoran Petric, Miomir S. Stankovic, Radomir S. Stankovic, Ivan
Sto-jmenovic, Djordje Vukomanovic. History of Mathematical Logic in Serbia
Srecko Kovac, Berislav Zarnic. An Outline of the History of the Croatian
Logic
Vilém Novák. A Concise Glance at the History of Fuzzy Logic in Czechia
(with a glimpse of the origin of data-mining-the GUHA method)
Marián Zouhar. On Some Slovak Contributions to Non-Classical Logics
Martin Tabakov. The Development of Mathematical Logic in Bulgaria
Chapter Six. Dialectical Logic and Informal-Logical Philosophy of Sci-ence
Andrey Maidansky. The Concept of Truth in Ilyenkov's Dialectical Logic
Anguel S. Stefanov. Philosophy of Science in Bulgaria
Herbert Hörz. Science of Science in the German Democratic Republic. Remarks
of a Contemporary Witness
János Laki. The Role of Informal Logic in the Kuhnian Scientific Change
János Laki. Versions of Externalism. Hungarian Contributions to the
Post-Positivist Philosophy of Science
Chapter Seven. The History of Logic as Histories of People
Jan Wolenski. The Story of a Footnote
Vitaly I. Levin. Victor Ivanovich Shestakov, the Scientist and Person
Vitaly I. Levin. Sofia Alexandrovna Yanovskaya, the Person, Teacher, and
Sci-entist
Index
About the Contributors







