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Distributed for the Center for the Study of Language and Information

Paul F. Syverson

Logic, Convention, and Common Knowledge

A Conventionalist Account of Logic

166 pages,  6 x 9  © 2002
Series: Center for the Study of Language and Information - Lecture Notes

Cloth $55.00

ISBN: 9781575863917   Published November 2002

Paper $25.00

ISBN: 9781575863924   Published November 2002

One of the fundamental theses of this book is that logical consequence and logical truth are not simply given, but arise as conventions among the users of logic. Thus Syverson explains convention within a game-theoretic framework, as a kind of equilibrium between the strategies of players in a game where they share common knowledge of events—a revisiting of Lewis's Convention that argues that convention can be reasonably treated as coordination equilibria. Most strikingly, a realistic solution is provided for Gray's classic coordination problem, wherein two generals can only communicate with each other through unreliable means.
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