Philosophy Dictionary of Arguments

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 D. Chalmers - Philosophy Dictionary of Arguments
 
Proofs: A proof in logic, mathematics is a finite string of symbols, which derives a statement in a system from the axioms of the system together with already proven statements. See also Proof theory, Provability, Syntax, Axioms.
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Annotation: The above characterizations of concepts are neither definitions nor exhausting presentations of problems related to them. Instead, they are intended to give a short introduction to the contributions below. – Lexicon of Arguments.
 
Author Item    More concepts for author
Aristotle Proofs   Aristotle
Barrow, John D. Proofs   Barrow
Chalmers, David Proofs   Chalmers
Deutsch, David Proofs   Deutsch
Dummett, Michael E. Proofs   Dummett
d’Abro, A. Proofs   d’Abro
Frege, Gottlob Proofs   Frege
Genz, Hennig Proofs   Genz
Goodman, Nelson Proofs   Goodman
Heidegger, Martin Proofs   Heidegger
Lakatos, Imre Proofs   Lakatos
Leibniz, G.W. Proofs   Leibniz
Logic Texts Proofs   Logic Texts
Lorenzen, Paul Proofs   Lorenzen
Mayr, Ernst Proofs   Mayr
Nozick, Robert Proofs   Nozick
Quine, W.V.O. Proofs   Quine
Schopenhauer, Arthur Proofs   Schopenhauer
Tarski, Alfred Proofs   Tarski
Vollmer, Gerhard Proofs   Vollmer
Waismann, Friedrich Proofs   Waismann
Wittgenstein, Ludwig Proofs   Wittgenstein

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