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Combinatory Logic and Whitehead's Theory of Prehensions

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  14 March 2022

Frederic B. Fitch*
Affiliation:
Yale University

Extract

In this paper I wish to reformulate in my own way some parts of Whitehead's theory of prehensions. This reformulation will deviate in various respects from Whitehead's own detailed views and terminology, but the main inspiration is from Whitehead (1).

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © 1957, The Williams & Wilkins Company

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References

1. This paper was presented at a meeting of the American Philosophical Association, Eastern Division, at the University of Pennsylvania on December 27, 1956.Google Scholar
2. Combinatory logic has been developed mainly by Moses Schönfinkel, H. B. Curry, and J. B. Rosser. See, for example, M. Schönfinkel, Über die Bausteine der mathematischen Logik, Mathematische Annalen, vol. 92 (1924), pp. 305–316; Curry, H. B., Consistency and completeness of the theory of combinators, Journal of Symbolic Logic, vol. 6 (1941), pp. 54–61; Rosser, J. B., New sets of postulates for combinatory logics, ibid., vol. 7 (1942), pp. 18–27. Curry has written very extensively on the subject. The present writer's work in “basic logic” bears close affinity to combinatory logic and so does the work of Alonzo Church and S. C. Kleene on λ-definability.Google Scholar