51:07
Graham Priest - Frege
A lecture on Gottlob Frege's legacy....
published: 11 Aug 2012
author: SonytoBratsoni
Graham Priest - Frege
Graham Priest - Frege
A lecture on Gottlob Frege's legacy.- published: 11 Aug 2012
- views: 2421
- author: SonytoBratsoni
10:24
Ayer on Frege and Russell: Section 1
Bryan Magee talks to A.J. Ayer about Gottlob Frege and Bertrand Russell; specifically abou...
published: 15 Mar 2008
author: flame0430
Ayer on Frege and Russell: Section 1
Ayer on Frege and Russell: Section 1
Bryan Magee talks to A.J. Ayer about Gottlob Frege and Bertrand Russell; specifically about their published works and their impact Bryan Magee talks to A.J. ...- published: 15 Mar 2008
- views: 66174
- author: flame0430
27:09
Key Thinkers: Graham Priest on Gottlob Frege (Part 1)
Part 1 | Part 2In this Key Thinkers (University of Melbourne) lecture, Professor of Philos...
published: 03 May 2013
author: themonthlyvideo
Key Thinkers: Graham Priest on Gottlob Frege (Part 1)
Key Thinkers: Graham Priest on Gottlob Frege (Part 1)
Part 1 | Part 2In this Key Thinkers (University of Melbourne) lecture, Professor of Philosophy Graham Priest discusses the influence of Gottlob Frege. Friedr...- published: 03 May 2013
- views: 61
- author: themonthlyvideo
45:36
Partially Examined Life podcast - Frege - The Logic of Language
This is an excerpt from a prior episode of The Partially Examined Life podcast, discussing...
published: 17 Mar 2011
author: shinobirastafari
Partially Examined Life podcast - Frege - The Logic of Language
Partially Examined Life podcast - Frege - The Logic of Language
This is an excerpt from a prior episode of The Partially Examined Life podcast, discussing selected essays of Gottlob Frege. You can find the entire unabridg...- published: 17 Mar 2011
- views: 2808
- author: shinobirastafari
48:00
Filosofía Analítica, (Grandes Ideas de la Filosofía)
Filosofía analítica es un término genérico para un estilo de filosofía que comenzó a domin...
published: 03 Jul 2013
author: triangulo777
Filosofía Analítica, (Grandes Ideas de la Filosofía)
Filosofía Analítica, (Grandes Ideas de la Filosofía)
Filosofía analítica es un término genérico para un estilo de filosofía que comenzó a dominar a los países de lengua inglesa en el siglo XX. En los Estados Un...- published: 03 Jul 2013
- views: 225
- author: triangulo777
6:00
Gottlob Frege vs. Immanuel Kant: Transcendetal Logic vs. Frege's Foundations of Arithmatic
While Kant argues for synthetic a priori, Frege argues that devising a more sophisticated ...
published: 12 Nov 2013
Gottlob Frege vs. Immanuel Kant: Transcendetal Logic vs. Frege's Foundations of Arithmatic
Gottlob Frege vs. Immanuel Kant: Transcendetal Logic vs. Frege's Foundations of Arithmatic
While Kant argues for synthetic a priori, Frege argues that devising a more sophisticated logical grammar for arithmatic can help us prove that arithmatic works in logic sized steps- published: 12 Nov 2013
- views: 81
42:16
Logic
Melvyn Bragg tackles the philosophy of logic - first mapped out by Aristotle in the 4th ce...
published: 02 Apr 2012
author: Gottfried Leibniz
Logic
Logic
Melvyn Bragg tackles the philosophy of logic - first mapped out by Aristotle in the 4th century BC; disregarded by Descartes in the 17th century and revived ...- published: 02 Apr 2012
- views: 2523
- author: Gottfried Leibniz
13:18
Claudio Costa: FREGE SEM LÁGRIMAS (1): LÓGICA
Breve introdução sem ambições de perfeição à filosofia de Gottlob Frege. (Claudio F. Costa...
published: 19 Apr 2013
author: Claudio ferreira costa
Claudio Costa: FREGE SEM LÁGRIMAS (1): LÓGICA
Claudio Costa: FREGE SEM LÁGRIMAS (1): LÓGICA
Breve introdução sem ambições de perfeição à filosofia de Gottlob Frege. (Claudio F. Costa, Aulas - Depto. de Filosofia UFRN)- published: 19 Apr 2013
- views: 243
- author: Claudio ferreira costa
8:38
Gottlob Frege: Predicate Calculus and Mathematical Functions; critique of syllogistic logic
mathematicians tended to think functions were only relevant to numbers; Frege shows, throu...
published: 15 Aug 2013
author: chadafrican
Gottlob Frege: Predicate Calculus and Mathematical Functions; critique of syllogistic logic
Gottlob Frege: Predicate Calculus and Mathematical Functions; critique of syllogistic logic
mathematicians tended to think functions were only relevant to numbers; Frege shows, through a detailed analysis of components, its relevance to predication.- published: 15 Aug 2013
- author: chadafrican
24:33
Key Thinkers: Graham Priest on Gottlob Frege (Part 2)
Part 1 | Part 2 In this Key Thinkers (University of Melbourne) lecture, Professor of Philo...
published: 03 May 2013
author: themonthlyvideo
Key Thinkers: Graham Priest on Gottlob Frege (Part 2)
Key Thinkers: Graham Priest on Gottlob Frege (Part 2)
Part 1 | Part 2 In this Key Thinkers (University of Melbourne) lecture, Professor of Philosophy Graham Priest discusses the influence of Gottlob Frege. Fried...- published: 03 May 2013
- views: 30
- author: themonthlyvideo
21:39
Wie ein Philosophiestudium aussehen könnte...
Kapitel: 0:48 - Schulische Voraussetzungen 1:14 - Persönliche Voraussetzungen 3:40 - Aufba...
published: 18 Mar 2012
author: SakuraSakury
Wie ein Philosophiestudium aussehen könnte...
Wie ein Philosophiestudium aussehen könnte...
Kapitel: 0:48 - Schulische Voraussetzungen 1:14 - Persönliche Voraussetzungen 3:40 - Aufbau des Studiums 11:38 - Allgemeines: Jobmöglichkeiten, Empfehlungen,...- published: 18 Mar 2012
- views: 10609
- author: SakuraSakury
0:20
How to Pronounce Friedrich Ludwig Gottlob Frege
Friedrich Ludwig Gottlob Frege (8 November 1848 -- 26 July 1925) was a German mathematicia...
published: 20 Sep 2012
author: German Channel
How to Pronounce Friedrich Ludwig Gottlob Frege
How to Pronounce Friedrich Ludwig Gottlob Frege
Friedrich Ludwig Gottlob Frege (8 November 1848 -- 26 July 1925) was a German mathematician, logician and philosopher. This video is for "German1184" who req...- published: 20 Sep 2012
- views: 681
- author: German Channel
6:59
Gottlob Frege on the Third Realm: Frege's Platonism vs. Psychologism
why Frege argued that third realm is neither mental nor physical...
published: 27 Aug 2013
Gottlob Frege on the Third Realm: Frege's Platonism vs. Psychologism
Gottlob Frege on the Third Realm: Frege's Platonism vs. Psychologism
why Frege argued that third realm is neither mental nor physical- published: 27 Aug 2013
- views: 27
54:26
The Mathematical Paradigm in Philosophy: On Frege's Concept‐Script
This talk offers a critical discussion of the influence of the mathematical paradigm in ph...
published: 15 Sep 2013
The Mathematical Paradigm in Philosophy: On Frege's Concept‐Script
The Mathematical Paradigm in Philosophy: On Frege's Concept‐Script
This talk offers a critical discussion of the influence of the mathematical paradigm in philosophy, as exemplified by Frege's conception of logical analysis. The talk was delivered at the conference "Mind-Language-World: From Dilthey to Wittgenstein", University of Kent, 10 September 2013 The slide not discussed in the talk (additional objections to Frege): More Problems • 'Concepts are functions': Frege nowhere gives an argument for this claim. It can be actually refuted (see Kanterian pp. 203f.). • Major philosophical claims like 'No concept is an object' can't be formulated in concept‐script. • The combination of Sense‐Reference with argument‐function makes things even more complex and less coherent. • In concept‐script the judgment‐stroke is a predicate and the original assertible proposition is 'the violent death of Archimedes'. But definite descriptions are not assertibles! • Frege's analysis of fictional terms undermines his argument-function analysis. • Problems with indexicals. Begriffsschrift §9: Cato kills Cato gives us one‐place function ... kills himself. Hartley Slater (2007): ... kills himself is not expressible in a context‐free language, hence not a function! Frege misled by the mathematical concept of function. Some Literature: Baker & Hacker, Logical Excavations, 1984 Ben-Yami, Logic & Natural Language: On Plural Reference and Its Semantic and Logical Significance, 2004 Kanterian, Frege: A Guide for the Perplexed, 2012 Lenzen, Calculus Universalis: Studien zur Logik von G. W. Leibniz , 2004 Peckhaus, Logik, Mathesis universalis und allgemeine Wissenschaft: Leibniz und die Wiederentdeckung der formalen Logik im 19. Jahrhundert, 1997 Peckaus, "Regressive Analysis", 2000 Rundle, Grammar in Philosophy, 1979 Strawson, Individuals, 1971; Subject and Predicate in Logic and Grammar, 1974 Trendelenburg, "Ueber Leibnizens Entwurf einer allgemeinen Charakteristik", 1867 Westerhoff, "Ars Characteristica Kantiana: Ludwig Benedict Trede's Forgotten Necessary Grammar", 2003 Wilson, "Frege's Mathematical Setting", 2010 Slater, The De-Mathematisation of Logic, 2007- published: 15 Sep 2013
- views: 47
Vimeo results:
31:06
Bertrand Russell: Analyzing Language pt 1
Stephen Neale, Distinguished Professor of Philosophy at the CUNY Graduate Center, discusse...
published: 09 Apr 2012
author: Simply Charly
Bertrand Russell: Analyzing Language pt 1
Stephen Neale, Distinguished Professor of Philosophy at the CUNY Graduate Center, discusses Bertrand Russell's seminal paper "On Denoting" published in the journal MIND in 1905 and the ensuing philosophical debate centered around it.
29:33
Bertrand Russell: Analyzing Language pt 2
Stephen Neale, Distinguished Professor of Philosophy at the CUNY Graduate Center, discusse...
published: 09 Apr 2012
author: Simply Charly
Bertrand Russell: Analyzing Language pt 2
Stephen Neale, Distinguished Professor of Philosophy at the CUNY Graduate Center, discusses Bertrand Russell's seminal paper "On Denoting" published in the journal MIND in 1905 and the ensuing philosophical debate centered around it.
65:27
What is ... a language game?
Hartwig Mayer speaks on "What is ... a Language Game?" at the "What is ...?" seminar. The ...
published: 27 Jun 2010
author: Peter Krautzberger
What is ... a language game?
Hartwig Mayer speaks on "What is ... a Language Game?" at the "What is ...?" seminar. The talk took place on Friday, January 22, at the BMS Loft in Urania.
Abstract
Around the end of 19th century a new paradigm arose in philosophy known as the "linguistic turn". Philosophers, like Gottlob Frege, were focused on analyzing language and formalized its logical structure in order to distinguish between absurd, meaningless, and meaningful sentences hoping to make misunderstandings disappear.
Wittgenstein's work was strongly influencing this kind of philosophy. In his early stage he was a supporter of an "ideal language". After finishing his "Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus" and keeping silent for some while (he believed he had solved all essential questions) Wittgenstein again became interested in philosophy. But now his interest was devoted to "normal language". Instead of searching for some ideal structure behind language he took it then as it is in the first place, namely as a performative act - a language game. I will talk about some basic ideas of Wittgenstein's later philosophy which will give some background for his understanding of mathematics.
0:44
# petit livre : references
# série : petit livre http://vimeo.com/album/250078
# Plan de Paris
# reference for Petit ...
published: 03 Aug 2010
author: moony
# petit livre : references
# série : petit livre http://vimeo.com/album/250078
# Plan de Paris
# reference for Petit livre
A reference, or a references point, is the intensional use of one thing, a point of reference or reference state, to indicate something else. When reference is intended, what the reference points to is called the referent.
References are indicated by sounds (like onomatopoeia), pictures (like roadsigns), text (like bibliographies), indexes (by number) and objects (a wedding ring); but endless concrete and abstract methods can be used intentionally. This includes methods that intentionally hide the reference from some observers, as in cryptography.
The following sections give specific usages of reference in different subjects.
In academics and scholarship, an author-title-date information in bibliographies and footnotes, specifying complete works of other people. Copying of material by another author without proper citation or without required permissions is plagiarism.
Keeping a diary allows an individual to use references for personal organization, whether or not anyone else understands the systems of reference used. However, scholars have studied methods of reference because of their key role in communication and co-operation between different people, and also because of misunderstandings that can arise. Modern academic study of reference has been developing since the 19th Century.
In academic literature, a reference is a previously published written work within academic publishing that has been used as a source for theory or claims referred to that are used in the text. References contain complete bibliographic information so the interested reader can find them in a library. References can be added either at the end of the publication or as footnotes.
In publishing, a reference is citation of a work, in a footnote, from which an idea was taken.
In scholarship, a reference may be a citation of a text that has been used in the creation of a piece of work such as an essay, report, or oration. Its primary purpose is to allow people who read such work to examine the author's sources, either for validity or to learn more about the subject. Such items are often listed at the end of an article or book in a section marked "Bibliography" or "References". A bibliographical section often contains works not cited by the author, but used as background reading or listed as potentially useful to the reader. A reference section contains all of the works and only those works cited by the author(s) in the main text.
In semantics, reference is generally construed as the relationships between nouns or pronouns and objects that are named by them. Hence, the word "John" refers to John. The word "it" refers to some previously specified object. The object referred to is called the "referent" of the word. Sometimes the word-object relation is called "denotation"; the word denotes the object. The converse relation, the relation from object to word, is called "exemplification"; the object exemplifies what the word denotes. In syntactic analysis, if a word refers to a previous word, the previous word is called the "antecedent".
Gottlob Frege argued that reference cannot be treated as identical with meaning: "Hesperus" (an ancient Greek name for the evening star) and "Phosphorus" (an ancient Greek name for the morning star) both refer to Venus, but the astronomical fact that '"Hesperus" is "Phosphorus"' can still be informative, even if the "meanings" of "Hesperus" and "Phosphorus" are already known. This problem led Frege to distinguish between the sense and reference of a word. Some cases seem to be too complicated to be classified within this framework; the acceptance of the notion of secondary reference may be necessary to fill the gap.
Words can often be meaningful without having a referent. Fictional and mythological names such as "Bo-Peep" and "Hercules" illustrate this possibility.
For those who argue that one cannot directly experience the divine (e.g. God), the sign "God" can serve as an example of a reference with an absent referent. Additionally, certain sects of Judaism and other religions consider it sinful to write, discard, or deface the name of the divine. To avoid this problem, the signifier G-d is sometimes used, though this could be seen as a sign that refers to another sign with an absent referent.
In mathematics, the absent referent can be seen with the symbol for zero, "0" or the empty set, "{ }".
The semantic sign can be considered a subset of a more general concept, the linguistic sign, first elucidated by Ferdinand de Saussure. A sign contains two parts, the signified (a thought that represents an object), and the signifier (the sound or written word). Both have a referent (the actual physical object).
The sign is a building block for texts that supplies sound and meaning. The smallest building block is called a morpheme and may be lexical (or referential, carrying a lexical or encyclopedic meaning, i.e. r
Youtube results:
11:41
Gottlob Frege & Aristotle: Concept & Object, 1st Order & 2nd Order vs. Intuitive Grasp of Species
how Frege is both closer to Aristotle than expected but still quite incompatible; Frege's ...
published: 25 Aug 2013
Gottlob Frege & Aristotle: Concept & Object, 1st Order & 2nd Order vs. Intuitive Grasp of Species
Gottlob Frege & Aristotle: Concept & Object, 1st Order & 2nd Order vs. Intuitive Grasp of Species
how Frege is both closer to Aristotle than expected but still quite incompatible; Frege's response to the Ontological Argument- published: 25 Aug 2013
- views: 51
4:51
Friedrich Ludwig Gottlob Frege Philosoph 1871 - 1873 Rote Straße 32 Deutsch
http://www.Polizei-Beratung.de Spenden Sie Speckwursti! https://www.paypal.com/cgi-bin/web...
published: 22 Oct 2011
author: Boris Gonschorek
Friedrich Ludwig Gottlob Frege Philosoph 1871 - 1873 Rote Straße 32 Deutsch
Friedrich Ludwig Gottlob Frege Philosoph 1871 - 1873 Rote Straße 32 Deutsch
http://www.Polizei-Beratung.de Spenden Sie Speckwursti! https://www.paypal.com/cgi-bin/webscr?cmd=_s-xclick&hosted;_button_id=KE4HT5X4GYJEE Die Pflege des Cha...- published: 22 Oct 2011
- views: 293
- author: Boris Gonschorek