Part 1: The Dynamics of Knowledge I: Proof-Theoretical Approaches and the
Interactive Viewpoint.- Chapter
1 Granström, Johan: Perennial Intuitionism.- Chapter 2 Piecha, Thomas
and Schroeder-Heister, Peter: Atomic Systems in Proof-Theoretic Semantics:
Two Approaches.- Chapter 3 Rahman, Shahid; Jovanovic, Radmila and Clerbout,
Nicolas: Knowledge and its Game Theoretical Foundations: The Challenge of
the Dialogical Approach to Constructive Type Theory.- Chapter 4 McAdams,
Darryl and Sterling, Jonathan: Dependent types for Pragmatics.- Chapter 5
Naibo, Alberto; Petrolo, Mattia and Seiller, Thomas: On the Computational
Meaning of Axioms.- Part 2 The
Dynamics of Knowledge II: Epistemology, Games, and Dynamic Epistemic logic.-
Chapter 6 Pacuit, Eric and Roy Olivier: A Dynamic Analysis of Interactive
Rationality.- Chapter 7 Hawke, Peter: Relevant Alternatives in
Epistemology and Logic.- Chapter 8 Shi, Chenwei: in Knowledge Based on
Reliable Evidence.- Chapter 9 Başkent, Can: Public Announcements and
Inconsistencies: For a Paraconsistent Topological Model.- Chapter 10
Rebuschi, Manuel: Knowing Necessary Truths.- Chapter 11 Gómez-Caminero,
Emilio and Nepomuceno, Angel: Modified Tableaux For Some Kinds Of Multimodal
Logics.- Part 3 Argumentation,
Conversation and Meaning in Context.- Chapter 12 Martínez, Silvia: Irony as a visual argument.- Chapter 13 Rothenfluch, Sruthi: Ascribing
knowledge to Experts: A Virtue-Contextualist Approach.- Chapter 14 Nzokou,
Gildas: Defeasible Argumentation in African Oral Traditions. A Special Case
of Dealing with non-Monotonic Inference in a Dialogical Framework.- Chapter
15 Punčochář, Vít: Semantics of Assertibility and Deniability.- Chapter 16
Salguero-Lamillar, Francisco J.: The quest for the concept in the XXth century:
predicates, functions, categories and argument structure.- Part 4 A critical Interlude.- Chapter 17
Wolenski, Jan: On Leonard Nelson’s criticism of Epistemology.- Part 5 Knowledge and Sciences I: Naturalized
Logic and Epistemology, Cognition and Abduction.- Chapter 18 Woods,
John: Logic Naturalized.- Chapter 19 Soler-Toscano, Fernando: Action
Models for the Extended Mind.- Chapter 20 Iranzo, Valeriano: Explanatory
Reasoning: a probabilistic interpretation.- Chapter 21 Pietarinen, Ahti and
Belluci, Francesco: The Iconic Moment. Towards a Peircean theory of
diagrammatic imagination.- Part 6
Knowledge and Sciences II: The Role of Models and the Use of Fictions.- Chapter
22 Huneman, Philippe: Does emergence also belong to the scientific image?
Elements of an alternative theoretical framework towards an objective notion of
emergence.- Chapter 23 Fernández Moreno, Luis: A Comparison Of The
Semantics Of Natural Kind Terms And Artifactual Terms.- Chapter 24 Rivadulla,
Andrés: Models, Representation and Incompatibility. A Contribution to the
Epistemological Debate on the Philosophy of Physics.- Chapter 25 Sievers,
Juliele Maria: Fictions in Legal Science: the Strange Case of the Basic Norm.
Juan Redmond is full professor at the University of Valparaíso, Institute oh Philosophy and research fellow at the Conicyt (Chile). He is graduated in Philosophy by the University of Cuyo (Argentina), Master in Literature by the Faculty of Etudes Romanes by the University of Lille 3 (France), with a dissertation untitled Fictions in the work of Jorge Luis Borges: for an artefactual approach and PhD in 2010 in Philosophy, University of Lille 3 (France), with a dissertation on Dialogical logic of fictions.
Olga Maria Pombo Martins is graduated in Philosophy by the Faculty of Letters of the University of Lisbon, Master in Modern Philosophy by the Faculty of Social and Human Sciences by the New University of Lisbon, with a dissertation untitled Leibniz and the Problem of a Universal Language, PhD in 1998 in History and Philosophy of Education, University of Lisbon, with a dissertation on Unity of Sciences and disciplinar configuration of Knowledges. At 2009 she presented her Aggregation in History and Philosophy of Science at the Faculty of Sciences of the University of Lisbon (FCUL). She coordinated the scientific projects Encyclopedia and Hypertex (FCT- Sapiens, 1999-2002), Scientific Culture. Conceptual Migrations and Social Contaminations (FCT - Sapiens, 2002-2005) and Image in Science and Art (FCT - PTDC, 2006-2011). Since 2003, she is the coordinator of the research Centre for philosophy of Science of the University of Lisbon (CFCUL). She was the president of the FCUL Department Autonomous unit for History and Philosophy of Sciences from 2007 up until 2012.
Angel Nepomuceno is Professor at the University of Sevilla, Departement of Logic and Philosophy of Science. His global research line is the interdisciplinary field Logic, Language and Information, specifically Logic (classical and non-classical), Argumentation Theory, Epistemology and theory of scientific knowledge.
With this volume of
the series Logic, Epistemology, and the Unity of Science edited by S.
Rahman et al. a challenging dialogue is being continued. The series’
first volume argued that one way to recover the connections between logic,
philosophy of sciences, and sciences is to acknowledge the host of alternative
logics which are currently being developed. The present volume focuses on four
key themes. First of all, several chapters unpack the connection between
knowledge and epistemology with particular focus on the notion of knowledge as
resulting from interaction. Secondly, new epistemological perspectives on
linguistics, the foundations of mathematics and logic, physics, biology and law
are a subject of analysis. Thirdly, several chapters are dedicated to a
discussion of Constructive Type Theory and more generally of the proof-theoretical notion of
meaning. Finally, the book
brings together studies on the epistemic role of abduction and argumentation
theory, both linked to non-monotonic approaches to the dynamics of
knowledge.