Glossary_of_Principia_Mathematica

Glossary of <i>Principia Mathematica</i>

Glossary of Principia Mathematica

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This is a list of the notation used in Alfred North Whitehead and Bertrand Russell's Principia Mathematica (1910–1913).

The second (but not the first) edition of Volume I has a list of notation used at the end.

Glossary

This is a glossary of some of the technical terms in Principia Mathematica that are no longer widely used or whose meaning has changed.

apparent variable
bound variable
atomic proposition
A proposition of the form R(x,y,...) where R is a relation.
Barbara
A mnemonic for a certain syllogism.
class
A subset of the members of some type
codomain
The codomain of a relation R is the class of y such that xRy for some x.
compact
A relation R is called compact if whenever xRz there is a y with xRy and yRz
concordant
A set of real numbers is called concordant if all nonzero members have the same sign
connected
connexity
A relation R is called connected if for any 2 distinct members x, y either xRy or yRx.
continuous
A continuous series is a complete totally ordered set isomorphic to the reals. *275
correlator
bijection
couple
1.  A cardinal couple is a class with exactly two elements
2.  An ordinal couple is an ordered pair (treated in PM as a special sort of relation)
Dedekindian
complete (relation) *214
definiendum
The symbol being defined
definiens
The meaning of something being defined
derivative
A derivative of a subclass of a series is the class of limits of non-empty subclasses
description
A definition of something as the unique object with a given property
descriptive function
A function taking values that need not be truth values, in other words what is not called just a function.
diversity
The inequality relation
domain
The domain of a relation R is the class of x such that xRy for some y.
elementary proposition
A proposition built from atomic propositions using "or" and "not", but with no bound variables
Epimenides
Epimenides was a legendary Cretan philosopher
existent
non-empty
extensional function
A function whose value does not change if one of its arguments is changed to something equivalent.
field
The field of a relation R is the union of its domain and codomain
first-order
A first-order proposition is allowed to have quantification over individuals but not over things of higher type.
function
This often means a propositional function, in other words a function taking values "true" or "false". If it takes other values it is called a "descriptive function". PM allows two functions to be different even if they take the same values on all arguments.
general proposition
A proposition containing quantifiers
generalization
Quantification over some variables
homogeneous
A relation is called homogeneous if all arguments have the same type.
individual
An element of the lowest type under consideration
inductive
Finite, in the sense that a cardinal is inductive if it can be obtained by repeatedly adding 1 to 0. *120
intensional function
A function that is not extensional.
logical
1.  The logical sum of two propositions is their logical disjunction
2.  The logical product of two propositions is their logical conjunction
matrix
A function with no bound variables. *12
median
A class is called median for a relation if some element of the class lies strictly between any two terms. *271
member
element (of a class)
molecular proposition
A proposition built from two or more atomic propositions using "or" and "not"; in other words an elementary proposition that is not atomic.
null-class
A class containing no members
predicative
A century of scholarly discussion has not reached a definite consensus on exactly what this means, and Principia Mathematica gives several different explanations of it that are not easy to reconcile. See the introduction and *12. *12 says that a predicative function is one with no apparent (bound) variables, in other words a matrix.
primitive proposition
A proposition assumed without proof
progression
A sequence (indexed by natural numbers)
rational
A rational series is an ordered set isomorphic to the rational numbers
real variable
free variable
referent
The term x in xRy
reflexive
infinite in the sense that the class is in one-to-one correspondence with a proper subset of itself (*124)
relation
A propositional function of some variables (usually two). This is similar to the current meaning of "relation".
relative product
The relative product of two relations is their composition
relatum
The term y in xRy
scope
The scope of an expression is the part of a proposition where the expression has some given meaning (chapter III)
Scott
Sir Walter Scott, author of Waverley.
second-order
A second order function is one that may have first-order arguments
section
A section of a total order is a subclass containing all predecessors of its members.
segment
A subclass of a totally ordered set consisting of all the predecessors of the members of some class
selection
A choice function: something that selects one element from each of a collection of classes.
sequent
A sequent of a class α in a totally ordered class is a minimal element of the class of terms coming after all members of α. (*206)
serial relation
A total order on a class[1]
significant
well-defined or meaningful
similar
of the same cardinality
stretch
A convex subclass of an ordered class
stroke
The Sheffer stroke (only used in the second edition of PM)
type
As in type theory. All objects belong to one of a number of disjoint types.
typically
Relating to types; for example, "typically ambiguous" means "of ambiguous type".
unit
A unit class is one that contains exactly one element
universal
A universal class is one containing all members of some type
vector
1.  Essentially an injective function from a class to itself (for example, a vector in a vector space acting on an affine space)
2.  A vector-family is a non-empty commuting family of injective functions from some class to itself (VIB)

Symbols introduced in Principia Mathematica, Volume I

More information , ...

Symbols introduced in Principia Mathematica, Volume II

More information Symbol, Approximate meaning ...

Symbols introduced in Principia Mathematica, Volume III

More information Symbol, Approximate meaning ...

See also


Notes

  1. PM insists that this class must be the field of the relation, resulting in the bizarre convention that the class cannot have exactly one element.
  2. Note that by convention PM does not allow well-orderings on a class with 1 element.

References

  • Whitehead, Alfred North, and Bertrand Russell. Principia Mathematica, 3 vols, Cambridge University Press, 1910, 1912, and 1913. Second edition, 1925 (Vol. 1), 1927 (Vols. 2, 3).

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