On the logic of incomplete answers
- 12 March 1965
- journal article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in The Journal of Symbolic Logic
- Vol. 30 (1) , 65-68
- https://doi.org/10.2307/2270583
Abstract
I have argued in [1] that a concept bearing some resemblance to ‘p is the answer to d’ (p a proposition and d a question) can be defined wherever d has the form,‘For which a's is it the case that A (a)?’ (Qa)A(a)where a is a variable and A a wff containing a. To say that p is the true and complete answer to (Qa)A(a) is expressed as saying that p is logically equivalent to the true conjunction of A(a) or ~A(a) for each a. It is defined as; Such a concept of answer is like Belnap's [2] direct true answer to a complete list question, or like Harrah's use [3] (p. 43) of the notion of a state description. The main difference between my approach and that of Belnap and Harrah is that while they are concerned to develop a formal metalanguage for discussion of questions and answers I am concerned to express, as far as possible in existing systems, certain interrogative statements; in particular statements of the form ‘— is the (an) answer to —’.While the account in [1] does give a formal analysis of one ‘answer’ concept there are respects in which it is inadequate.1. Since it uses entailment (or strict implication) to define the relation between p the answer and d the question we can shew that if p is the answer to d and q is logically equivalent to p then q is the answer to d.Keywords
This publication has 2 references indexed in Scilit:
- Dialectical logic, semantics and metamathematicsErkenntnis, 1979
- Nuel D. BelnapJr., An analysis of questions: Preliminary report. Technical Memorandum 1287, System Development Corporation, Santa Monica1963, 160 pp.The Journal of Symbolic Logic, 1972