0000000000387162
AUTHOR
Francisco Sauri Mercader
La forma de los entes matemáticos en The Principles of Mathematics de Bertrand Russell.
The critic against subject-predicate propositions is a Russell's feature. See for example A Critical Exposition of the Philosophy of Leibniz. However, in The Principles of Mathematics Russell goes back to the subject-predicate form but in the context of his contribuition to the development of Modern Logic and his philosophy of mathematics
El idealismo transcendental de Kant y la filosofía de las maemáticas
La ontología de la proposición en el Russell de "The Principles of Mathematics" y los artículos de Meinong
Bertrand Russell, in The Principles of Mathematics and ¿Meinong¿s Theory of Complexes and Assumptions¿, maintains a unitary conception of the ontology of propositions. He makes a difference between judgment and proposition. Propositions are independent entities and they have different presentations. False propositions subsist; this is related to the relation in the proposition called ¿affirmation¿ and the double condition of predicates (meaning and term). But that conception has bad consequences for the unity and identity of proposition.