The Hamiltonian Syllogistic
Abstract
This paper undertakes a re-examination of Sir William Hamilton's doctrine of the quantification of the predicate. Hamilton's doctrine comprises two theses. First, the predicates of traditional syllogistic sentence-forms contain implicit existential quantifiers, so that, for example, "All p are q" is to be understood as "All p are some q". Second, these implicit quantifiers can be meaningfully dualized to yield novel sentence-forms, such as, for example, "All p are all q". Hamilton attempted to provide a deductive system for his language, along the lines of the classical syllogisms. We show, using techniques unavailable to Hamilton, that such a system does exist, though with qualifications that distinguish it from its classical counterpart.
Keywords
Cite
@article{arxiv.1011.2973,
title = {The Hamiltonian Syllogistic},
author = {Ian Pratt-Hartmann},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1011.2973},
year = {2024}
}
Comments
30 pages