Jean Nicod


Jean George Pierre Nicod was a French philosopher and logician.

Biography

In his best known work, he showed that the classical propositional calculus could be derived from one axiom and one rule, both expressed using the Sheffer stroke. He also proposed the Nicod's axiom and developed Nicod's criterion, which proposed that any positive case of a hypothesis corroborates a theory.
Nicod died at the age of 30 from tuberculosis.
See also Carl Hempel's raven paradox.

Legacy

The Institut Jean Nicod — a branch of the French Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique -- is research laboratory at the interface between cognitive science and the social sciences — was named in honour of Nicod's memory. Jean Nicod's name is also commemorated by the prestigious Jean Nicod Lectures, which are delivered annually in Paris by a leading philosopher of mind or philosophically oriented cognitive scientist. The lecturer is awarded the Jean Nicod Prize by the CNRS, which sponsors the lectures to develop the field of cognitive science in France.

Main works