HOME TOP UP PREV NEXT 1 2 3 4 GERMAN MAP Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus 5.45
x) . ~fx" and others.
We may not first introduce it for oone class of cases and then
for another, for it would then remain doubtful whether its
meaning in the two cases was the same, and there would be no
reason to use the same way of symbolizing in the two cases.
(In short, what Frege ("Grundgesetze der Arithmetik") has said about the introduction of signs by definitions holds, mutatis mutandis, for the introduction of primitive signs also.)
(Thus in the "Principia Mathematica" of Russell and Whitehead there occur definitions and primitive propositions in words. Why suddenly words here? This would need a justification. There was none, and can be none for the process is actually not allowed.)
But if the introduction of a new expedient has proved necessary in one place, we must immediately ask: Where is this expedient always to be used? Its position in logic must be made clear.
Or rather it must become plain that there are no numbers in logic.
There are no pre-eminent numbers.
In logic there cannot be a more general and a more special.