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  1. The Logical Syntax of Language appeared in 1934 (the modified English translation in 1937). It is Carnap’s best-known book, though its reception has been tortuous. The main features of the book itself and its reception history are discussed in the main entry (Section 5) on Carnap; the story of Carnap’s path from the Aufbau to the Syntax is ...

  2. 15. Juli 2014 · For nearly a century mathematicians and logicians have been striving hard to make logic an exact science. But a book on logic must contain, in addition to the formulae, an expository context which, with the assistance of the words of ordinary language, explains the formulae and the relations between them; and this context often ...

    • Rudolf Carnap
    • London
    • 2014
  3. Book Title: Carnap's Logical Syntax of Language. Editors: Pierre Wagner. Series Title: History of Analytic Philosophy. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1057/9780230235397. Publisher: Palgrave Macmillan London. eBook Packages: Palgrave Religion & Philosophy Collection, Philosophy and Religion (R0)

  4. 29. Feb. 2020 · Carnap, Rudolf, 1891-1970. Publication date. 1937. Topics. Logical positivism, Grammar, Comparative and general -- Syntax, Logic, Symbolic and mathematical, Positivisme logique, Syntaxis, Logique symbolique et mathématique. Publisher.

  5. 7. Aug. 2023 · The logical syntax of language. by. Carnap, Rudolf, 1891-1970. Publication date. 1954. Topics. Grammar, Comparative and general -- Syntax, Logical positivism, Logic, Symbolic and mathematical. Publisher.

  6. 24. Feb. 2020 · As we will discuss in more detail below, his Logische Syntax der Sprache (1934, translated as The Logical Syntax of Language, 1937, hereafter LSS) worked out two different frameworks for mathematics (and physics) and developed a corresponding account of philosophy as the logical syntax of the language of science. Soon after, Carnap ...

  7. Prof. Carnap himself. speaks of epistemology as containing " psychological questions " concerning "the procedure of knowledge, that is the mental events by which we come to know something ",' and logical questions, i.e. questions which are found on analysis to belong. to syntax. Thus there are in his view no specifically epistemo- logical problems.