Carnap's early metatheory: scope and limits (Q1708750): Difference between revisions
From MaRDI portal
Latest revision as of 08:27, 15 July 2024
scientific article
Language | Label | Description | Also known as |
---|---|---|---|
English | Carnap's early metatheory: scope and limits |
scientific article |
Statements
Carnap's early metatheory: scope and limits (English)
0 references
27 March 2018
0 references
When the contribution of several pioneers have crystallised into a standard theory or paradigm, historians of the discipline are at first concerned to emphasise the differences between the work of each pioneer and the newly achieved synthesis: pioneer \(A\) failed to reach our present understanding in this respect or that respect or that respect. The result makes \(A\) look bad. Later, historians form a more balanced judgement, noting ways in which \(A\) foreshadowed or approached the present position and ways in which \(A\) fell short. Discussion of the work Carnap did in the late 1920s on what would now be regarded as model theory has reached the second of these stages. He made considerable progress towards making precise such notions as consequence, isomorphism, categoricity, and completeness. He was more aware of the issues of domain variation underlying those notions than he has been given credit for. Nevertheless, he was writing before the most celebrated results of Gödel and of Tarski, and his work must be regarded as inadequate in some ways.
0 references
Carnap
0 references
type theory
0 references
metalogic
0 references
model theory
0 references
consequence
0 references
isomorphism
0 references
0 references
0 references
0 references