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Publicado por Phoenix Books, 1956
Librería: Easy Chair Books, Lexington, MO, Estados Unidos de America
Softcover. Condición: Good. Trade size. Some creasing and discoloring to the covers; pages yellowed; a good reading copy. Illustrator: . Quantity Available: 1. Category: Philosophy; Inventory No: 198427.
Publicado por University of Chicago Press, 1964
Librería: Redux Books, Grand Rapids, MI, Estados Unidos de America
Libro
Paperback. Condición: Good. Paperback. Pages have minor marking. Covers show edge wear and rubbing.; 100% Satisfaction Guaranteed! Ships same or next business day!.
Publicado por The University of Chicago Press, 1956
Librería: Windows Booksellers, Eugene, OR, Estados Unidos de America
Miembro de asociación: CBA
Hardcover, no dust jacket. Ex-Libris with usual library matter and stamps to upper, lower, and outer edges of text. Slight wear and browning on all edges of text. Otherwise VG 258 pp.
Publicado por Univ. of Chicago Press, Chicago, 1956
Librería: Old Army Books, Lexington, KY, Estados Unidos de America
Hardcover. Condición: Good. Estado de la sobrecubierta: No Dust Jacket. Enlarged Edition. Lacks dust jacket, previous owner name inked near top of ffep. ; 258 pages.
Publicado por Chicago U.P.; Cambridge U.P, 1946
Librería: austin books and more, New York, NY, Estados Unidos de America
Libro
Hardcover. Condición: Good. ex-lib hardcover no dj. [NB_34 MAR16T5 AL1] has edge wear/bumped corners, no marks on pages. tight and sturdy reading copy.
Publicado por University of Chicago Press February 1988, 1988
ISBN 10: 0226093476ISBN 13: 9780226093475
Librería: A Cappella Books, Inc., Atlanta, GA, Estados Unidos de America
Libro
Trade Paperback. Condición: Good. Light crease on the front of the cover.
Más opciones de compra de otros vendedores en IberLibro
Nuevo desde EUR 31,16
Usado desde EUR 19,25
Encuentre también Tapa blanda
Publicado por Clarke Pr, 2007
ISBN 10: 1406734675ISBN 13: 9781406734676
Librería: GreatBookPrices, Columbia, MD, Estados Unidos de America
Libro
Condición: New.
Más opciones de compra de otros vendedores en IberLibro
Nuevo desde EUR 25,11
Usado desde EUR 81,72
Encuentre también Tapa blanda
Librería: N. Fagin Books, Chicago, IL, Estados Unidos de America
1947.1956/1958 Midway reprint 1988. Linguistics. University of Chicago Press/Midway Reprint. Very good paperback 258p.
Publicado por Chicago [u.a.] : University of Chicago Press, 1967
Librería: Wissenschaftliches Antiquariat Köln Dr. Sebastian Peters UG, Köln, Alemania
Condición: gut. VIII, 258 S., 18 cm, Einband leicht fleckig, gebräunt. Sprache: Englisch.
Publicado por University of Chicago Press, 1960
ISBN 10: 0226093468ISBN 13: 9780226093468
Libro
Paperback. Condición: Fair. [Third Impression] Card covers worn and creased, a few faintly grubby handling marks, edges have a slight curl; Pages heavily age-toned, previous owner's signature on the front free endpaper; Binding fairly firm. Overall a slightly tired-looking, but sound copy. ; Phoenix Books; 7.8 X 5.2 X 0.7 inches; 268 pages.
Librería: Jürgen Patzer, Konstanz, Alemania
Publicado por University of Chicago Press, 1956
Librería: Books Revisited, Saint Cloud, MN, Estados Unidos de America
Libro
Hardcover. Condición: Good. Hardcover in dust jacket, minor wear, light underlining on a few pages, previous owner name on front endpaper, pages tanning, binding tight, a very nice copy.
Publicado por Chicago, University of Chicago Press., 1947
Librería: Antiquariat Thomas Haker GmbH & Co. KG, Berlin, Alemania
Miembro de asociación: GIAQ
Libro
Hardcover. 210 p., Acceptable condition. Slightly bumped edges. Library copy with usual marks. Sprache: Deutsch Gewicht in Gramm: 595.
Publicado por University of Chicago Press, 1988
Librería: Chiemgauer Internet Antiquariat GbR, Altenmarkt, BAY, Alemania
Libro
Wrappers. 19 cm. Condición: Sehr gut. Midway Reprint edition. 258 Seiten. SEHR gutes Exemplar der Reprint-Ausgabe. - Auf der Titelseite ganz kleines Namenskürzel eines nicht unbedeutenden deutschen Philosophen, mit Popper und Jaspers befreundet. Aus dessen Bibliothek. Sprache: Englisch Gewicht in Gramm: 400.
Publicado por Phoenix Books, 1967, 1967
Librería: Sutton Books, Norwich, VT, Estados Unidos de America
Miembro de asociación: IOBA
Condición: as new. Pbk 258pp, an unread copy, excellent clean tight unmarked as new.
Publicado por University of Chicago Press, 1970
Librería: Hay-on-Wye Booksellers, Hay-on-Wye, HEREF, Reino Unido
Mass Market Paperback. Condición: Good. Mild scuffs and nicks to extremities. Light tanning and foxing to edge of text block.
Publicado por Clarke Press, 2008
ISBN 10: 144372534XISBN 13: 9781443725347
Librería: GreatBookPrices, Columbia, MD, Estados Unidos de America
Libro
Condición: As New. Unread book in perfect condition.
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Nuevo desde EUR 42,43
Usado desde EUR 41,15
Encuentre también Tapa dura
Publicado por University of Chicago Press, Chicago, 1947
Librería: Rulon-Miller Books (ABAA / ILAB), St. Paul, MN, Estados Unidos de America
8vo, pp. viii, 210; original cloth in green printed dust jacket (back cover browned); chips and tears along jacket edges not affecting text, price on front flap has been torn out; contemporary bookseller's ticket on front pastedown, interior fine.
Publicado por university of chicago press, chicago, 1957
Librería: leaves, Brooklyn, NY, Estados Unidos de America
second printing, 1957. rudolf carnap (1891-1970) was a german philosopher and advocate of logical positivism. here carnap continues his discussion of linguistic expressions from "introduction to semantics and formalization of logic." chicago: university of chicago press. hardcover. book condition: very slight toning, extremely minor shelf wear. very good +. jacket condition: significant chipping to top of spine and front cover, shelf wear to edges, unclipped ($5.00). very good.
Publicado por The University of Chicago Press (1948), Chicago, 1948
Librería: Evening Star Books, ABAA/ILAB, Madison, WI, Estados Unidos de America
Hardcover. Condición: Very Good. Estado de la sobrecubierta: Very Good. Second printing. 8vo. [4], v-viii, 210, [2] pp. Green cloth with gold lettering on the spine; faded orange topstain. Price of $5.00 on the front flap of the dust jacket. A second printing of Carnap's foundational work in Logic and Philosophy of Language. A Very Good book with heavy pencil annotation and underlining; jacket shows notable edge wear, particularly to the spine panel.
Publicado por University of Cnicago, Chicago, 1956
Librería: Lime Works: Books Art Music Ephemera Used and Rare, Toronto, ON, Canada
Libro Original o primera edición
Hardcover. Condición: Very Good. Estado de la sobrecubierta: Very Good. 1st Edition. 258 p. A small amount of neat underlining. Ink name to the first blank page. Sound clean unmarked copy light overall handling wear. X23.
Publicado por Chicago University Press, 1956
Librería: Pegasus Books NZ, Wellington, NA, Nueva Zelanda
Libro
Hardcover. Condición: Good - Very Good. Estado de la sobrecubierta: Good - Very Good. 2nd Edition. On the dust-jacket it is referred to as being an 'enlarged edition'. Ex-library, but with few markings and few signs of use. The dust-jacket has minor damage and soiling, and a small library number written on the spine.
Librería: Librairie Chat, Beijing, China
Condición: Fine. Number of pages: 335p Size: 22cm.
Librería: Librairie Chat, Beijing, China
Condición: Fine. The book is in fine condition.
Publicado por University Of Chicago Press, London, 1947
Librería: Any Amount of Books, London, Reino Unido
Original o primera edición
Large 8vo. pp viii, 210. Original publisher's green cloth, lettered gilt on spine. Bookplate of Anthony Quinton (Baron Quinton) (1925-2010) on the front endpaper - a British political and moral philosopher, metaphysician, and writer on materialist philosophy of mind. Tiny Blackwell's book label on the front pastedown with very slight rubbing, corners very slightly bumped and slight soiling to cloth, otherwise sound, close very good with clean text.
Librería: Antikvariat Faust, Göteborg, Suecia
Original o primera edición
The University of Chicago Press, Chicago 1947. First edition. viii, 210 pp. Publisher's cloth, no jacket. Lettering in gold. Corners slightly bumped.
Publicado por Chicago University Press, Chicago, 1947
Librería: Meiwes, Stuttgart, Alemania
Original o primera edición
First Edition. viii, 210 p.; original green cloth. 24 cm. First edition. 1947. One of Carnap's major works and a fundamental contribution to modal logic. It fully expounds a theory of meaning that has its roots in the work of Frege and has been of widest influence. It was highly estimated by Kurt Goedel. From the library of Maurice Cornforth, with his signature. An excellent fine copy.
Librería: Lynge & Søn ILAB-ABF, Copenhagen, Dinamarca
Miembro de asociación: ILAB
Original o primera edición
Chicago, (1947). 8vo. Orig. green full cloth w. gilt lettering to spine. Minor bumping to extremities, otherwise a very nice, clean and fresh copy. VIII, 210 pp. The not common first edition of Carnap's important main work on semantics, in which he, as the first logician ever, uses semantics to explain modalities. This led to a interest in the structure of scientific theories, and his main concerns here were to describe the distinction between analytic and synthetic statements and to suitably formulate the verifiability principle" -he thus wishes to find a criterion of significance that can be applied to scientific language.It is in his "Meaning and Necessity" that Carnap first defines the notions of L-true and L-false (Chapter II). A statement is said to be L-true if its truth depends on semantic rules, and L-false if its negation is L-true. Any statement that is either L-true or L-false is L-determined" analytic statements are L-determined, while synthetic statements are not L-determined. As opposed to the definitions he gives in his "The Logical Syntax of Language", these definitions now apply to semantic in stead of syntactic concepts. It is also in this work that he gives his interesting explanation of his "belief-sentences"Rudolf Carnap (born 1891 in Ronsdorf, Germany, died 1970 in Santa Monica, California) was an immensely influential analytic philosopher, who has contributed decisively to the fields of logic, epistemology, semantics, philosophy of science, and philosophy of language. He was one of the leading figures of the Vienna Circle, and a prominent logical positivist. He studied philosophy, physics and mathematics at the universities of Berlin and Freiburg, and worked at the universities of Jena, Vienna and Prague until 1935, when he, due to the war, emigrated to the U.S., where he became an American citizen in 1941. In America he became professor of the University of Chicago. In Jena he was appointed Professor of Mathematics, though his main interest at that time was in physics. By 1913 he planned to write his dissertation on thermionic emission, but this was interrupted by World War I, where he served at the front until 1917. Afterwards he studied the theory of relativity under Einstein in Berlin, and he developed the theory for a new dissertation, namely on an axiomatic system for the physical theory of space and time. He thus ended up writing the important dissertation under the direction of Bouch on the theory of space (Raum) from a philosophical point of view. After the publication of his first work, Carnap's involvement with the Vienna Circle began to develop. He met Reichenbach in 1923 and was introduced to Moritz Schlick in Vienna, where he then moved to become assistant professor at the university. He soon became one of the leading members of the Vienna Circle, and in 1929 he, Neurath, and Hahn wrote the manifest of the Circle.According to Hintikka, Carnap came extremely close to possible-worlds semantics in his "Meaning and Necessity", but did not succeed, because he was not able to go beyond classical model theory (see "Carnap's heritage in logical semantics" in "Rudolf Carnap, Logical Empiricist").
Librería: Lynge & Søn ILAB-ABF, Copenhagen, Dinamarca
Miembro de asociación: ILAB
Original o primera edición
Chicago, (1947). 8vo. Orig. green full cloth w. gilt lettering to spine, minor bumping to extremities, with the scarce original green dust-jacket, not price-clipped. D-j. w. several tears to extremities, some resulting in loss, the worst being to top of spine (ab. 2x1 cm) and top of back (ab. 1,5 1 cm.). Old owner's name erased from bottom of title-page, one page with underlinings. Otherwise a very nice and clean copy. VIII, 210 pp. The not common first edition, with the scarce dust-jacket, of Carnap's important main work on semantics, in which he, as the first logician ever, uses semantics to explain modalities. This led to an interest in the structure of scientific theories, and his main concerns here were to describe the distinction between analytic and synthetic statements and to suitably formulate the verifiability principle" -he thus wishes to find a criterion of significance that can be applied to scientific language.It is in his "Meaning and Necessity" that Carnap first defines the notions of L-true and L-false (Chapter II). A statement is said to be L-true if its truth depends on semantic rules, and L-false if its negation is L-true. Any statement that is either L-true or L-false is L-determined" analytic statements are L-determined, while synthetic statements are not L-determined. As opposed to the definitions he gives in his "The Logical Syntax of Language", these definitions now apply to semantic instead of syntactic concepts. It is also in this work that he gives his interesting explanation of his "belief-sentences"Rudolf Carnap (born 1891 in Ronsdorf, Germany, died 1970 in Santa Monica, California) was an immensely influential analytic philosopher, who has contributed decisively to the fields of logic, epistemology, semantics, philosophy of science, and philosophy of language. He was one of the leading figures of the Vienna Circle, and a prominent logical positivist. He studied philosophy, physics and mathematics at the universities of Berlin and Freiburg, and worked at the universities of Jena, Vienna and Prague until 1935, when he, due to the war, emigrated to the U.S., where he became an American citizen in 1941. In America he became professor of the University of Chicago. In Jena he was appointed Professor of Mathematics, though his main interest at that time was in physics. By 1913 he planned to write his dissertation on thermionic emission, but this was interrupted by World War I, where he served at the front until 1917. Afterwards he studied the theory of relativity under Einstein in Berlin, and he developed the theory for a new dissertation, namely on an axiomatic system for the physical theory of space and time. He thus ended up writing the important dissertation under the direction of Bouch on the theory of space (Raum) from a philosophical point of view. After the publication of his first work, Carnap's involvement with the Vienna Circle began to develop. He met Reichenbach in 1923 and was introduced to Moritz Schlick in Vienna, where he then moved to become assistant professor at the university. He soon became one of the leading members of the Vienna Circle, and in 1929 he, Neurath, and Hahn wrote the manifest of the Circle.According to Hintikka, Carnap came extremely close to possible-worlds semantics in his "Meaning and Necessity", but did not succeed, because he was not able to go beyond classical model theory (see "Carnap's heritage in logical semantics" in "Rudolf Carnap, Logical Empiricist").
Librería: Lynge & Søn ILAB-ABF, Copenhagen, Dinamarca
Miembro de asociación: ILAB
Original o primera edición
Chicago, (1947). 8vo. Orig. green full cloth w. gilt lettering to spine, minor bumping to extremities. With the ownership-signature of "W.V. Quine" to front free end-paper. A near mint copy. VIII, 210 pp. The not common first edition, of Carnap's important main work on semantics, in which he, as the first logician ever, uses semantics to explain modalities. This led to an interest in the structure of scientific theories, and his main concerns here were to describe the distinction between analytic and synthetic statements and to suitably formulate the verifiability principle" -he thus wishes to find a criterion of significance that can be applied to scientific language. THE COPY HAS BELONGED TO THE GREAT LOGICIAN WILLARD ORMAN VAN QUINE and bears his signature to front free end-paper. Rudolf Carnap and W.O. Van Quine are to of the greatest logicians of the 20th century and a copy like the present must me considered of the greatest interest. In the early 30'ies Quine met Carnap, under whom he studies in Prague, and according to Quine himself, Carnap's work was a great source of inspiration to him.It is in his "Meaning and Necessity" that Carnap first defines the notions of L-true and L-false (Chapter II). A statement is said to be L-true if its truth depends on semantic rules, and L-false if its negation is L-true. Any statement that is either L-true or L-false is L-determined" analytic statements are L-determined, while synthetic statements are not L-determined. As opposed to the definitions he gives in his "The Logical Syntax of Language", these definitions now apply to semantic instead of syntactic concepts. It is also in this work that he gives his interesting explanation of his "belief-sentences"Rudolf Carnap (born 1891 in Ronsdorf, Germany, died 1970 in Santa Monica, California) was an immensely influential analytic philosopher, who has contributed decisively to the fields of logic, epistemology, semantics, philosophy of science, and philosophy of language. He was one of the leading figures of the Vienna Circle, and a prominent logical positivist. He studied philosophy, physics and mathematics at the universities of Berlin and Freiburg, and worked at the universities of Jena, Vienna and Prague until 1935, when he, due to the war, emigrated to the U.S., where he became an American citizen in 1941. In America he became professor of the University of Chicago. In Jena he was appointed Professor of Mathematics, though his main interest at that time was in physics. By 1913 he planned to write his dissertation on thermionic emission, but this was interrupted by World War I, where he served at the front until 1917. Afterwards he studied the theory of relativity under Einstein in Berlin, and he developed the theory for a new dissertation, namely on an axiomatic system for the physical theory of space and time. He thus ended up writing the important dissertation under the direction of Bouch on the theory of space (Raum) from a philosophical point of view. After the publication of his first work, Carnap's involvement with the Vienna Circle began to develop. He met Reichenbach in 1923 and was introduced to Moritz Schlick in Vienna, where he then moved to become assistant professor at the university. He soon became one of the leading members of the Vienna Circle, and in 1929 he, Neurath, and Hahn wrote the manifest of the Circle.According to Hintikka, Carnap came extremely close to possible-worlds semantics in his "Meaning and Necessity", but did not succeed, because he was not able to go beyond classical model theory (see "Carnap's heritage in logical semantics" in "Rudolf Carnap, Logical Empiricist").