This is Greg Restall’s website, with news, writings, links, and bite sized updates. For background look below.

Relevance Logic

(with J. Michael Dunn) “Relevance Logic,” (with J. Michael Dunn), pages 1–136 in Volume 6 of the The Handbook of Philosophical Logic, second edition, Dov Gabbay and Franz Guenther (editors), Kluwer 2002, ISBN 1-4020-0583.

A revision of the Handbook of Philosophical Logic essay on relevant logics, updating it to include work on display logic, relevant predication, Urquhart’s undecidability and complexity results, and connections with other substructural logics.

Details

Author: Greg Restall
Status: Published in 2002

Local file: rle.pdf (842KB)

Subjects: negation relevant logic substructural logic

About

I’m Greg Restall, and this is my website. I work in Philosophy at the University of Melbourne. Email: greg at consequently.org; Post: School of of Philosophy, Anthropology and Social Inquiry, University of Melbourne, Parkville 3010, Australia.

Start at the home page—a summary of the site. The left column is news, archived on the news archive page. The central column contains recent items from the writing page, which lists my publications. These are also categorised by topic. You can follow my links at my account on delicious and occasional short snarky remarks at @consequently on twitter.

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This site is handcoded: I write text in Textmate, and Webby files things in the right place and uploads them to the server. This page was last modified on 2009-01-04 at 12:04AM.

Thought

I haven’t a clue what it is to give a sense to a notion; the notion of giving sense to a notion hasn’t been given a sense, either in this context or, as far as I know, in any other. (I’ve been told that sense are sometimes given to concepts at Oxford after the gates close to visitors; but that may be a leg-pull.)
— Jerry Fodor, in The London Review of Books July 2000.