Fitting and Mendelsohn present a thorough treatment of first-order modal
logic, together with some propositional background. They adopt
throughout a threefold approach. Semantically, they use possible world
models; the formal proof machinery is tableaus; and full philosophical
discussions are provided of the way that technical developments bear on
well-known philosophical problems.
The book covers quantification itself, including the difference between
actualist and possibilist quantifiers; equality, leading to a treatment
of Frege's morning star/evening star puzzle; the notion of existence and
the logical problems surrounding it; non-rigid constants and function
symbols; predicate abstraction, which abstracts a predicate from a
formula, in effect providing a scoping function for constants and
function symbols, leading to a clarification of ambiguous readings at
the heart of several philosophical problems; the distinction between
nonexistence and nondesignation; and definite descriptions, borrowing
from both Fregean and Russellian paradigms.