Hughes, P., & Brecht, G. (1976). Vicious circles and infinity: A panoply of paradoxes. London: Cape. Originally published: Garden City, N.Y.: Doubleday, 1975.
Kant, I. (1998). Critique of pure reason repr. w. corr. (trans: Guyer, P., & Woo…Russell, B. (1902). Letter to Frege. In J. van Heijenoort (Ed.), From frege to gödel: A source book in mathematical logic, 1879–1931 (pp. 124–125). Harvard University Press: Cambridge, MA, 1967.
Salthe, S. N. (1985). Evolving hierarchical s…
J. A. Scott Kelso
scientist · 2 mentions across 1 reading
In this course
I cannot complete this task as requested because the excerpts provided do not actually contain references to J. A. Scott Kelso or any substantive discussion that would allow me to assess his relevance to the course. The excerpts appear to be incomplete bibliographic citations (Hughes & Brecht on paradoxes, Kant's Critique, Russell's letter to Frege, and Salthe on hierarchical systems) with no visible mention of Kelso himself. To write accurate 2-3 sentences about his role in the seminar, I would need excerpts that actually cite or discuss his work.
Mentioned in 1 reading
Appears alongside
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Grover Maxwell 2Roberto Poli 2Allen Newell 1Allen W. Wood 1David Marr 1Dennis Macko 1George Brecht 1Herbert Feigl 1Hilary Putnam 1Immanuel Kant 1Jancis Robinson 1Michael Scriven 1Mihajlo D. Mesarovic 1Patrick Hughes 1Paul Guyer 1Paul Oppenheim 1Ron McClamrock 1Thomas Nagel 1Yasuhiko Takahara 1Zenon W. Pylyshyn 1Akos Egyed 1Alfred Tarski 1Bertrand Russell 1Brown 1Carl Craver 1Gordon Globus 1Gottlob Frege 1Herbert A. Simon 1Irving Savodnik 1J. M. Spivey 1