Volume 14 (2023)
Volume 13 (2022)
Volume 11 (2020)
Volume 10 (2019)
Volume 9 (2018)
Volume 8 (2017)
Volume 7 (2016)
Volume 6 (2015)
Volume 5 (2014)
Volume 4 (2013)
Volume 3 (2012)
Volume 2 (2011)
Volume 1 (2010)
The Mental Existence, Memory and Complicated Arguments

Mahdi Assadi

Volume 12, Issue 2 , September 2021, Pages 1-29

https://doi.org/10.30465/lsj.2022.39792.1386

Abstract
  Some objections to the mental existence that are proposed by the western philosophers are almost unknown to Muslim philosophers and therefore have not received flawless response yet. For example, the complicated formulae objection, being one of the most important and difficult of them, says that since ...  Read More

Does Tarski captures the Common Concept of Logical Consequence?

Saeid Pourdanesh; Mahdi Behniafar

Volume 12, Issue 2 , September 2021, Pages 31-55

https://doi.org/10.30465/lsj.2022.39076.1382

Abstract
  This article is concerned of the problem that weather Tarski’s definition of the ‘logical consequence’ in his seminal article ‘On the Concept of Logical Consequence’ (1936), as his article claims, captures the common concept of logical consequence or not. First of all, for ...  Read More

The Unity of The Encoding Proposition

Hassan Hamtaii; Seyyed Mohammad Ali Hodjati; Lotfollah Nabavi

Volume 12, Issue 2 , September 2021, Pages 57-84

https://doi.org/10.30465/lsj.2021.37940.1374

Abstract
  The Unity of the Encoding PropositionAbstract: There is a family of problems under the rubric of “the unity of the proposition”. They ask how is it that (ordinary) propositions are unit wholes over and above their constituting parts, how is it that they are representational and have truth values. ...  Read More

Strawson and The Performative Theory of Truth

Gholamreza Hosseinpour

Volume 12, Issue 2 , September 2021, Pages 85-107

https://doi.org/10.30465/lsj.2021.36481.1364

Abstract
  In his article "Truth", Peter Strawson, following Ramsey, raises the issue of the redundancy of the theory of truth. He considers the utterance of sentences containing the truth predicate to do something, and in his idiomatic sense, he does not consider it constative, but performative. Performative utterances ...  Read More

Ḥaml al-Shay‘ ‘alā Nafsihī: Awwalī predication, shāyi‘ predication or tautology
Volume 12, Issue 2 , September 2021, Pages 109-126

https://doi.org/10.30465/lsj.2021.36457.1363

Abstract
  Predication is one of the main instruments in Logical analyses. Among all kinds of predication, ḥaml al-shay’ ‘alā nafsihī (predicating a thing of itself) is considered a contentious one in Islamic philosophy. One of these is what we can name by the help of post-Ṣadrīan terminology ...  Read More

The Semantics of Concrete Mass Terms

Mohsen Shabani Samghabadi

Volume 12, Issue 2 , September 2021, Pages 127-148

https://doi.org/10.30465/lsj.2021.36900.1372

Abstract
  Common nouns, in most natural languages, are divided into two categories: Count nouns and mass/noncount nouns. There are both syntactical and semantical distinctions between mass terms and count terms. However, among these distinctions, a syntactical distinction is the most obvious. Mass nouns are modified ...  Read More

Modal companions for some subintuitionistic logics

Fatemeh Shirmohammadzadeh Maleki

Volume 12, Issue 2 , September 2021, Pages 149-173

https://doi.org/10.30465/lsj.2022.39376.1383

Abstract
  Our main goal in this paper is to find modal companions for some subintuitionistic logics introduced by de Yongh and Shirmohammadzadeh. They introduced two types of neighbourhood frames, N-neighbourhood frames and NB-neighbourhood frames, in order to prove the completeness of these subintuitionistic ...  Read More

metaphysics of definition: problems of definition in Zeta and Eta of Aristotle's Metaphysics

ali reza attarzadeh

Volume 12, Issue 2 , September 2021, Pages 175-192

https://doi.org/10.30465/lsj.2022.40373.1391

Abstract
  The aim of this article is to reconstruct the problems and answers which Aristotle raises in Zeta and eta of Metaphysics. Aristotle’s fundamental presupposition here is that definition has parts, and it corresponds to essence or form. This very presupposition leads to the main problems raised in ...  Read More

Bounded Model Theory and its Applications to Bounded Arithmetic

Abolfazl Alam; Morteza Moniri

Volume 12, Issue 2 , September 2021, Pages 193-211

https://doi.org/10.30465/lsj.2021.36251.1358

Abstract
  Bounded model theory can be considered as part of first-order model theory, which its aim is to study model-theoretic notions in a language consisting of an order relation where all quantifiers are restricted to the bounded ones. One can apply bounded model theory to study some problems in bounded arithmetic. ...  Read More

Aristotle on Haqiqi and Khariji propositions

Asadollah Fallahi

Volume 12, Issue 2 , September 2021, Pages 213-234

https://doi.org/10.30465/lsj.2022.40758.1394

Abstract
  Following Fakhr al-din Razi, Muslim logicians invented two technical terms: haqiqi and khariji propositions, which prima facia are absent from Aristotle’s works as well as from his ancient followers’. We show that although Aristotle used haqiqi propositions for his absolute syllogisms, he ...  Read More

Logic, measures and unbounded integration logic
Volume 12, Issue 2 , September 2021, Pages 235-250

https://doi.org/10.30465/lsj.2022.38229.1375

Abstract
  Interactions between logic, measure and probability theories have always possessed significant importance in logic and model-theory. In this regard, numerous logical frameworks were introduced to connect these subjects. Integration-logic is amongst important ones of them that was first introduced by ...  Read More

Theophrastus on prosleptic syllogisms

Fereshte Nabati

Volume 12, Issue 2 , September 2021, Pages 251-272

https://doi.org/10.30465/lsj.2022.38251.1376

Abstract
  Theophrastus, a student and successor of Aristotle, in addition to describing his master's logical system, also tried to reform and expand it. Furthermore, he introduced forms of argument that were either not mentioned at all in Aristotle's works or that Aristotle merely referred to in passing. One of ...  Read More