



desertcart.com: An Introduction to Non-Classical Logic, Second Edition: From If to Is (Cambridge Introductions to Philosophy): 9780521670265: Graham Priest: Books Review: Amazing - Amazing book. Review: Loved it. - Beautiful book. I learned in hours what I had been trying to learn for months. The only bad thing is now I'm spoiled and feel like any presentation of a logical system not done by Priest isn't clear enough for me.
| Best Sellers Rank | #191,475 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) #11 in Logic (Books) #130 in Philosophy of Logic & Language #565 in History & Philosophy of Science (Books) |
| Customer Reviews | 4.4 4.4 out of 5 stars (70) |
| Dimensions | 6.85 x 1.46 x 9.72 inches |
| Edition | 2nd Revised ed. |
| ISBN-10 | 0521670268 |
| ISBN-13 | 978-0521670265 |
| Item Weight | 2.84 pounds |
| Language | English |
| Part of series | Cambridge Introductions to Philosophy |
| Print length | 646 pages |
| Publication date | April 10, 2008 |
| Publisher | Cambridge University Press |
F**A
Amazing
Amazing book.
A**R
Loved it.
Beautiful book. I learned in hours what I had been trying to learn for months. The only bad thing is now I'm spoiled and feel like any presentation of a logical system not done by Priest isn't clear enough for me.
A**R
wow, unexpectedly clear
very easy to understand and extremely clear, that was unexpected!
P**R
If you are like me and find the tableaux method
If you are like me and find the tableaux method, alternatively referred to as "truth trees," annoying preferring the axiom approach then this is not the book for you. If you are indifferent or enjoy the tableaux method then this is an excellent book that would be a five star rating for you. It depends on your logical proclivities.
N**I
excellent
no comment
A**R
Better than expected
It totally did. Actually, the books is way better than I was expecting.
A**A
The bible in non-classical logic...
Priest does a wonderful job in explaining a surprisingly wide spectrum of non-classical logics, with a crystal-clear style, from both the mathematical and the philosophical point of views. For those who are only used to classical logic, this book is simply illuminating. Some points need to be improved though : the list of symbols is missing and the index is far from complete... The difficulty of part II is not due so much to the intrinsic intricacies but mostly to the constant need to review the corresponding chapters of part I... But this is unavoidable if one wants to include quantifiers and identity... And, here again, Priest does a terrific job in unifying the underlying concepts of possible-worlds semantics. This book now stands in my list of outstanding books on logic : 1. A. Tarski's "Introduction to Logic", a jewel, followed by P. Smith's superb entry-point "An introduction to Formal logic" and the lovely "Logic, a very short introduction" by Graham Priest 2. D. Goldrei's "Propositional and Predicate calculus" 3. Wilfrid Hodges' "Logic", followed by Smullyan's "First-order logic". 4. P. Smith's "An introduction to Gödel's theorems". 5. Kleene's "Introduction to metamathematics" & "Mathematical Logic". 6. G. Priest's " Introduction to non-classical logic". Hence forgetting altogether Van Dalen's indigestible "Logic & Stucture" as well as the even more indigestible Enderton, Mendelson & al...
M**R
The never-ending outline, good coverage though.
The author has apparently never heard of free-prose, as every paragraph is numbered! Odd style aside, its a fairly complete compendium of non-classical logics.
A**A
Priest does a wonderful job in explaining a surprisingly wide spectrum of non-classical logics, with a crystal-clear style, from both the mathematical and the philosophical point of views. For those who are only used to classical logic, this book is simply illuminating. Some points need to be improved though : the list of symbols is missing and the index is far from complete... The difficulty of part II is not due so much to the intrinsic intricacies but mostly to the constant need to review the corresponding chapters of part I... But this is unavoidable if one wants to include quantifiers and identity... And, here again, Priest does a terrific job in unifying the underlying concepts of possible-worlds semantics. This book now stands in my list of outstanding books on logic : 1. A. Tarski's "Introduction to Logic", a jewel, followed by P. Smith's superb entry-point "An introduction to Formal logic" and the lovely "Logic, a very short introduction" by Graham Priest 2. D. Goldrei's "Propositional and Predicate calculus" 3. Wilfrid Hodges' "Logic", followed by Smullyan's "First-order logic". 4. P. Smith's "An introduction to Gödel's theorems". 5. Kleene's "Introduction to metamathematics" & "Mathematical Logic". 6. G. Priest's " Introduction to non-classical logic". Hence forgetting altogether Van Dalen's indigestible "Logic & Stucture" as well as the even more indigestible Enderton, Mendelson & al...
J**N
A classic, thought-provoking and engaging textbook.
S**Y
Delivery was fast and the book is a good resource for learning non-classical logic. It is fairly technical so I would reccomend having some prior knowledge of logic. Priest is very knowledgable on the subject; in addition to this text he wrote the Oxford Very Short introduction for Logic which is an excellent companion to this text and goes over basics in an easily comprehensible form.
A**C
This is a superb survey of non-classical logic. I've used it several times in advanced undergraduate reading courses and it presents an enormous amount of material in a brisk yet very accessible way. Suitable for those who have already taken some basic logic.
Y**K
Great book, but it arrived damaged.
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