Logic List Mailing Archive
2nd CfP special issue of "Logica Universalis", Jan Van Heijenoort Centenary
Logica Universalis
Special Issue, Second Call for Papers
Jean Van Heijenoort Centenary
edited by
Irving H. Anellis <http://irvinganellis.info/default.aspx>
*Indiana University-Purdue University at Indianapolis*
Jean van Heijenoort
1912--1986
23 July 2012 marks the centenary of the birth of historian and philosopher
of logic Jean van Heijenoort, whose anthology *From Frege to Gödel *helped
define the nature and scope of modern mathematical logic for several
generations of logicians and the canon of fundamental works that comprise
the text for the formative period of mathematical logic as we know it
today. His influence in the history of mathematical logic was furthered by
his work as the editor of the papers of Jacques Herbrand and in his
contributions to the publication of the multi-volume *Collected Works* of
Kurt Gödel. The articles, published and unpublished, that were brought
together in his *Selected Essays* articulated his conception of the course
of the origin and development of mathematical logic. His *El desarrollo de
la teoría de la cuantificación* provided an exposition of the ?family of
formal systems? that comprise quantification theory and its proof
procedures: the axiomatic method, itself comprised of Frege-type systems
and Hilbert-type systems; Herbrand quantification; natural deduction; and
the Gentzen sequent calculus, which van Heijenoort enumerated as the four
principal approaches to first-order predicate calculus. He briefly
examined the history of each and considered them in their classical,
intuitionistic, and minimal versions and compared the strengths and
weaknesses of each.
As editor of *From Frege to Gödel*, van Heijenoort exercised a critical
influence on the historiography of logic through much of the second half
of the twentieth century. Although aspects of his views on the nature and
scope of mathematical logic have more recently been challenged, as have
aspects of his conception of the history of mathematical logic, his ideas
remain of continuing influence among historians and philosophers of logic
and frequently serve as the starting point in discussions which challenge
his views, for example, his emphasis on the pivotal work of Gottlob Frege,
and corresponding lesser emphasis on the contributions of Frege?s
contemporaries among the algebraic logicians, and in particular of Charles
Sanders Peirce and Ernst Schröder, which he considered largely
peripherally and indirectly, through the lens of the Löwenheim-Skolem
Theorem and Herbrand?s Fundamental Theorem. Thus van Heijenoort?s work
continues to occupy a significant place in the historiography and
philosophy of logic.
In addition to his historical work, van Heijenoort left a body of
manuscripts and typescripts, many of which were distributed to a handful
of close colleagues and to his Brandeis University logic students, and in
which he explored the model-theoretic properties of the falsifiability
tree method, particularly its soundness and completeness, and the relation
between the truth tree and falsifiability tree methods and its ancestors,
in particular Herbrand quantification and Beth tableaux. In his
*Introduction ??a sémantique des logiques non-classiques*, van Heijenoort
applied the tree method to intuitionistic and modal logic.
The following have already consented to contribute to this Special Issue:
Irving H. Anellis (Indiana University-Purdue University at Indianapolis)
Solomon Feferman (Stanford University)
John W. Dawson (Pennsylvania State University at York)
Philippe de Rouilhan (Université de Paris, I)
Georg Kreisel (Institut für Wissenschaftstheorie, Salzburg)
In addition, this special issue will include Jean van Heijenoort?s 1974
manuscript ?Historical Development of Modern Logic?, with an introduction
by the editor.
We invite contributions to the special issue of *Logica Universalis*
devoted to any and all aspects of van Heijenoort?s work in logic, its
history and philosophy. Contributions for consideration should be sent in
PDF to the guest editor Irving H. Anellis at ianellis@iupui.edu.
Publication schedule:
Initial submission: 31 January 2012
Preview copy: 31 March 2012
Final copy: 31 May 2012
Publication target date: 23 July 2012
Irving H. Anellis
Visiting Research Associate
Peirce Edition Project
Indiana University-Purdue University at Indianapolis