Gian Aldo Antonelli (antonelli-ga)
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Bibliography
Antonelli, Gian Aldo. 1992. “Revision Rules: An Investigation into Non-Monotonic
Inductive Definitions.” PhD dissertation, Pittsburgh,
Pennsylvania: Philosophy Department, University of Pittsburgh.
Antonelli, Gian Aldo. 1994.
“Non-Well-Founded Sets Via Revision Rules.”
The Journal of Philosophical Logic 23(6): 633–679.
Antonelli, Gian Aldo. 1997. “Defeasible Inheritance on Cyclic Networks.”
Artificial Intelligence 92(1–2): 1–23.
Antonelli, Gian Aldo. 1998. “Existential Quotients for Type Theory and the Consistency
Problem for NF.” The Journal of Symbolic
Logic 63(1): 247–261.
Antonelli, Gian Aldo. 1999a. “Conceptions and Paradoxes of Sets.”
Philosophia Mathematica 7(2): 136–163.
Antonelli, Gian Aldo. 1999b. “A Directly Cautious Theory of Defeasible Consequence for
Default Logic Via the Notion of General Extension.”
Artificial Intelligence 109(1–2): 71–109.
Antonelli, Gian Aldo. 2000a. “Proto-Semantics for Positive Free Logic.”
The Journal of Philosophical Logic 29(3): 277–294.
Antonelli, Gian Aldo. 2000b. “Review of Gabbay, Hogger and Robinson
(1994).” The Bulletin of Symbolic Logic
6(4): 480–484.
Antonelli, Gian Aldo. 2000c. “Virtuous Circles: From Fixed Points to Revision
Rules.” in Circularity,
Definition, and Truth, edited by André Chapuis and Anil Gupta, pp. 1–28. New Delhi: Indian Council of
Philosophical Research.
Antonelli, Gian Aldo. 2001a. “Review of Feferman (1998).”
The Bulletin of Symbolic Logic 7(2): 270–277.
Antonelli, Gian Aldo. 2001b.
“Non-Monotonic Logic.” in The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
Stanford, California: The Metaphysics Research Lab, Center for the Study
of Language; Information, https://plato.stanford.edu/archives/win2001/entries/logic-nonmonotonic/.
Antonelli, Gian Aldo. 2004.
“Logic.” in The
Blackwell Guide to the Philosophy of Computing and
Information, edited by Luciano Floridi, pp. 263–275. Blackwell
Philosophy Guides. Oxford: Blackwell Publishers, doi:10.1002/9780470757017.
Antonelli, Gian Aldo. 2006.
“Non-Monotonic Logic.” in The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
Stanford, California: The Metaphysics Research Lab, Center for the Study
of Language; Information, https://plato.stanford.edu/archives/spr2006/entries/logic-nonmonotonic/.
Antonelli, Gian Aldo. 2010a. “The Nature and Purpose of Numbers.” The
Journal of Philosophy 107(4): 191–212.
Antonelli, Gian Aldo. 2010b.
“Non-Monotonic Logic.” in The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
Stanford, California: The Metaphysics Research Lab, Center for the Study
of Language; Information, https://plato.stanford.edu/archives/sum2010/entries/logic-nonmonotonic/.
Antonelli, Gian Aldo. 2013. “On the General Interpretation of First-Order
Quantifiers.” The Review of Symbolic Logic 6(4):
637–658.
Antonelli, Gian Aldo. 2015. “Life on the Range: Quine’s Thesis and Semantic
Indeterminacy.” in Quantifiers,
Quantifiers, and Quantifiers: Themes in Logic, Metaphysics and
Language, edited by Alessandro Torza, pp. 171–190. Synthese
Library n. 373. Dordrecht: Springer, doi:10.1007/978-3-319-18362-6.
Antonelli, Gian Aldo. 2016. “Semantic Nominalism: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and
Love Universals.” in Objectivity,
Realism, and Proof. FilMat Studies in the Philosophy of
Mathematics, edited by Francesca Boccuni and Andrea Sereni, pp. 13–32. Boston
Studies in the Philosophy and History of Science n. 318.
Dordrecht: Springer.
Antonelli, Gian Aldo. 2017. “Completeness and Decidability of General First-Order
Logic (with a Detour Through the Guarded Fragment).”
The Journal of Philosophical Logic 46(3): 233–257.
Antonelli, Gian Aldo and Bicchieri, Cristina. 1994.
“Backwards-Forward Induction.” in TARK 1994. Theoretical Aspects of Reasoning
about Knowledge: Proceedings of the Fifth Conference, edited
by Ronald Fagin, pp. 24–43. San
Francisco, California: Morgan Kaufmann Publishers.
Antonelli, Gian Aldo and May, Robert C. 2012. “Quantifiers and Determiners.” in The Routledge Companion to Philosophy of
Language, edited by Gillian K. Russell and Delia Graff Fara, pp. 342–354. Routledge Philosophy
Companions. London: Routledge.
Antonelli, Gian Aldo and Thomason, Richmond H. 2002. “Representability in Second-Order Propositional Poly-Modal
Logic.” The Journal of Symbolic Logic 67(3):
1039–1054.
Bicchieri, Cristina and Antonelli, Gian Aldo. 1995. “Game-Theoretic Axioms for Local Rationality and Bounded
Knowledge.” Journal of Logic, Language, and
Information 4(2): 145–167.
Bicchieri, Cristina and Antonelli, Gian Aldo. 1996. “Games
Servers Play: A Procedural Approach.” in ATAL-95. Intelligent Agents Volume
II – Proceedings of the 1995 Workshop on Agent Theories,
Architectures, and Languages, edited by Michael J. Wooldridge, Jörg Paul Müller, and Miland Tambe, pp. 127–142. Lecture Notes in Computer Science. Berlin:
Springer.
May, Robert C. and Antonelli, Gian Aldo. 2005. “Frege’s Other Program.” Notre
Dame Journal of Formal Logic 46(1): 1–17.
Strasser, Christian and Antonelli, Gian Aldo. 2014.
“Non-Monotonic Logic.” in The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
Stanford, California: The Metaphysics Research Lab, Center for the Study
of Language; Information, https://plato.stanford.edu/archives/win2014/entries/logic-nonmonotonic/.
Strasser, Christian and Antonelli, Gian Aldo. 2016.
“Non-Monotonic Logic.” in The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
Stanford, California: The Metaphysics Research Lab, Center for the Study
of Language; Information, https://plato.stanford.edu/archives/fall2016/entries/logic-nonmonotonic/.
Strasser, Christian and Antonelli, Gian Aldo. 2019.
“Non-Monotonic Logic.” in The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
Stanford, California: The Metaphysics Research Lab, Center for the Study
of Language; Information, https://plato.stanford.edu/archives/sum2019/entries/logic-nonmonotonic/.
Further References
Feferman, Solomon. 1998. In the Light of Logic. Oxford: Oxford
University Press, doi:10.1093/oso/9780195080308.001.0001.
Gabbay, Dov M., Hogger, Christopher J. and Robinson, James A., eds. 1994. Handbook of Logic in Artificial Intelligence and Logic
Programming, Volume 3: Nonmonotonic Reasoning and Uncertain
Reasoning. Oxford: Oxford University Press.