Henry M. Sheffer
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Henry Maurice Sheffer (1882 – 1964) was an
American logician.Sheffer was a
Polish Jew born in
Ukraine, who immigrated to the USA with his parents. He was educated at
Harvard University, learning logic from
Josiah Royce. Sheffer spent most of his career teaching in Harvard's philosophy department. Scanlan (2000) is a study of Sheffer's life and work.Sheffer proved in 1913 that
Boolean algebra could be defined using a single primitive binary operation, "not both . . . and . . .", now abbreviated
NAND, or its dual
NOR, (in the sense of "neither . . . nor"). Likewise, the
propositional calculus could be formulated using a single connective, having the
truth table either of the
logical NAND, usually symbolized with a vertical line called the
Sheffer stroke, or its dual
logical NOR (usually symbolized with a vertical arrow or with a
dagger symbol).
Charles Peirce had also discovered these facts in 1880, but the relevant paper was not published until 1933. Sheffer also proposed axioms formulated solely in terms of his stroke.Sheffer's discovery won great praise from
Bertrand Russell, who used it extensively to simplify his own logic, in the second edition of his
Principia Mathematica.
W. V. Quine's
Mathematical Logic also made much of the Sheffer stroke.A
Sheffer connective, subsequently, is any connective in a
logical system that functions analogously: one in terms of which all other possible connectives in the language can be expressed. For example, they have been developed for quantificational and modal logics as well.
References
- Scanlan, Michael, 2000, "The Known and Unknown H. M. Sheffer," The Transactions of the C.S. Peirce Society 36: 193–224.
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- time: 2:41am EDT - Fri, Mar 19 2010