id author title date pages extension mime words sentences flesch summary cache txt work_vceij6bxljavndqh7sxyrdtzta J. H. WOODGER SCIENCE WITHOUT PROPERTIES 1951 1 .pdf application/pdf 586 33 59 The Journal is fortunate, however, in now having Professor I t is impossible at present to give statistics for the numbers of subscribers to the Journal, but the publishers, Messrs. appeared in a number of philosophical and scientific journals published in Woodger proceeded to show how a language for natural science (called WL) contains two kinds of signs : (1) names, and (2) operation signs. either signs of operations on names, by which new names are constructed, or signs of operations on statements by which new statements are constructed. Three simple syntactical rules suffice to define "statement in W L " . simplest statements are formed by the juxtaposition of two names ; the remaining statements are those resulting from the application of the operations A simple statement is true if everything Professor Woodger pointed out some of the problems which terms of use, available at https://www.cambridge.org/core/terms. Downloaded from https://www.cambridge.org/core. https://www.cambridge.org/core/terms https://www.cambridge.org/core ./cache/work_vceij6bxljavndqh7sxyrdtzta.pdf ./txt/work_vceij6bxljavndqh7sxyrdtzta.txt