Because of analytical philosophy, many philosophers like to restate some philosophical propositions in the first-order logical language of (b). These propositions are expressed in the language of Zhong (Wen). As a result, it is necessary to write a statement like "I don't have a girlfriend". X (¬ t (x) ? l (i, x), whose semantic translation is: there is no object, she is not a tissue, and she is in a shameless love relationship with herself.
2, diaosi is more than income, and local tyrants only look at wealth.
William Patty said that goods are wealth. Adam Smith said that all material products are wealth. Marx said that wealth is the whole result of productive labor. Any tangible physical assets (BMW gold bar balance treasure) and intangible human capital (employee nanny Husky) are the wealth of local tyrants.
I just want to be a handsome guy who can count quietly.
The quiet and beautiful person in the painting is Leibniz. Leibniz is called the father of mathematical logic. He has a great idea, trying to build a "universal symbolic calculus system" that can cover all human thinking activities and make people's thinking patterns as clear as mathematical operations.
Once there is an argument, whether scientific or philosophical, people can easily tell who is right as long as they sit down and do the math. His famous saying is: "Let's sit down and do the math". This great idea was later called "Leibniz Dream".
Although his dream has not come true, his influence is beyond doubt: Newton-Leibniz formula still puzzles the majority of teenagers today with high numbers.
I was very scared, so I turned to linguistics.
If you have a good spatial thinking, you must recognize the words "frighten my linguistics to turn around" in the picture. The linguistic turn was first proposed by Gustav Bergman in Logic and Reality (1964). He believes that all philosophers describe the world by describing exact language: language is the basic starting point of philosophers' research methods.
I went out for a walk and left at about 3: 30.
Speaking of walking, I have to mention the philosopher Kant. He lived in Koenigsberg, Germany in the18th century, and his daily activities, such as getting up, drinking coffee, writing, giving lectures, eating and walking, almost never changed, just as accurate as a machine.
Kant's walk is called "the famous walk", and it can be said that he is a living "walking watch". He goes out at exactly 3: 30 every day, and the church bell rings when he goes out. Most local residents look at the clock in Kant's way, and the church bell rings at the same time.