Philosophical Issues -- Why Play Logical Games? -- On The Narrow Epistemology of Game-Theoretic Agents -- Interpretation, Coordination and Conformity -- Fallacies as Cognitive Virtues -- Game-Theoretic Semantics -- A Strategic Perspective on if Games -- Towards Evaluation Games for Fuzzy Logics -- Games, Quantification and Discourse Structure -- Dialogues -- From Games to Dialogues and Back -- Revisiting Giles's Game -- Implicit Versus Explicit Knowledge in Dialogical Logic -- Computation and Mathematics -- In the Beginning was Game Semantics? -- The Problem of Determinacy of Infinite Games from an Intuitionistic Point of View
Summary
Presents mathematical game theory as an interface between logic and philosophy. This book offers a discussion of various aspects of this interaction, covering fresh technical results and examining the philosophical insights that these have yielded. It is suitable for argumentation theorists, linguists, economists, and computer scientists