•  176
    Frege Meets Zermelo: A Perspective on Ineffability and Reflection
    Review of Symbolic Logic 1 (2): 241-266. 2008.
    1. Philosophical background: iteration, ineffability, reflection. There are at least two heuristic motivations for the axioms of standard set theory, by which we mean, as usual, first-order Zermelo–Fraenkel set theory with the axiom of choice (ZFC): the iterative conception and limitation of size (see Boolos, 1989). Each strand provides a rather hospitable environment for the hypothesis that the set-theoretic universe is ineffable, which is our target in this paper, although the motivation is di…Read more
  •  84
    The Nature and Limits of Abstraction (review)
    Philosophical Quarterly 54 (214). 2004.
    This article is an extended critical study of Kit Fine’s The limits of abstraction, which is a sustained attempt to take the measure of the neo-logicist program in the philosophy and foundations of mathematics, founded on abstraction principles like Hume’s principle. The present article covers the philosophical and technical aspects of Fine’s deep and penetrating study.
  •  38
    Priest, Graham. An Introduction to Non-classical Logic (review)
    Review of Metaphysics 56 (3): 670-672. 2003.
  •  11
    Mathematics Without Numbers (review)
    Noûs 27 (4): 522-525. 1993.
  •  103
    Space, number and structure: A tale of two debates
    Philosophia Mathematica 4 (2): 148-173. 1996.
    Around the turn of the century, Poincare and Hilbert each published an account of geometry that took the discipline to be an implicit definition of its concepts. The terms ‘point’, ‘line’, and ‘plane’ can be applied to any system of objects that satisfies the axioms. Each mathematician found spirited opposition from a different logicist—Russell against Poincare' and Frege against Hilbert— who maintained the dying view that geometry essentially concerns space or spatial intuition. The debates ill…Read more
  •  40
    Acceptable notation
    Notre Dame Journal of Formal Logic 23 (1): 14-20. 1982.
  •  12
    Matftematical Objects
    In Bonnie Gold & Roger Simons (eds.), Proof and Other Dilemmas: Mathematics and Philosophy, Mathematical Association of America. pp. 157. 2008.
  •  141
    Structures and Logics: A Case for (a) Relativism
    Erkenntnis 79 (S2): 309-329. 2014.
    In this paper, I use the cases of intuitionistic arithmetic with Church’s thesis, intuitionistic analysis, and smooth infinitesimal analysis to argue for a sort of pluralism or relativism about logic. The thesis is that logic is relative to a structure. There are classical structures, intuitionistic structures, and (possibly) paraconsistent structures. Each such structure is a legitimate branch of mathematics, and there does not seem to be an interesting logic that is common to all of them. One …Read more
  •  225
    Conservativeness and incompleteness
    Journal of Philosophy 80 (9): 521-531. 1983.
  •  92
    Vagueness, Open-Texture, and Retrievability
    Inquiry: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Philosophy 56 (2-3): 307-326. 2013.
    Just about every theorist holds that vague terms are context-sensitive to some extent. What counts as ?tall?, ?rich?, and ?bald? depends on the ambient comparison class, paradigm cases, and/or the like. To take a stock example, a given person might be tall with respect to European entrepreneurs and downright short with respect to professional basketball players. It is also generally agreed that vagueness remains even after comparison class, paradigm cases, etc. are fixed, and so this context sen…Read more
  •  52
    Life on the Ship of Neurath: Mathematics in the Philosophy of Mathematics
    Croatian Journal of Philosophy 26 (2): 11--27. 2012.
    Some central philosophical issues concern the use of mathematics in putatively non-mathematical endeavors. One such endeavor, of course, is philosophy, and the philosophy of mathematics is a key instance of that. The present article provides an idiosyncratic survey of the use of mathematical results to provide support or counter-support to various philosophical programs concerning the foundations of mathematics
  •  14
    Arithmetic Sinn and Effectiveness
    Dialectica 38 (1): 3-16. 1984.
    SummaryAccording to Dummett's understanding of Frege, the sense of a denoting expression is a procedure for determining its denotation. The purpose of this article is to pursue this suggestion and develop a semi‐formal interpretation of Fregean sense for the special case of a first‐order language of arithmetic. In particular, we define the sense of each arithmetic expression to be a hypothetical process to determine the denoted number or truth value. The sense‐process is “hypothetical” in that t…Read more
  •  98
    Understanding church's thesis
    Journal of Philosophical Logic 10 (3): 353--65. 1981.
  •  27
    I—Stewart Shapiro
    Supplement to the Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society 79 (1): 147-165. 2005.
  •  18
    Review: Sets and Abstracts: Discussion (review)
    Philosophical Studies 122 (3). 2005.
  •  38
    Comparing implicit and explicit memory for brand names from advertisements
    with H. Shanker Krishnan
    Journal of Experimental Psychology: Applied 2 (2): 147. 1996.
  •  128
    The purpose of this paper is to present a thought experiment and argument that spells trouble for “radical” deflationism concerning meaning and truth such as that advocated by the staunch nominalist Hartry Field. The thought experiment does not sit well with any view that limits a truth predicate to sentences understood by a given speaker or to sentences in (or translatable into) a given language, unless that language is universal. The scenario in question concerns sentences that are not under…Read more
  •  116
    Principles of reflection and second-order logic
    Journal of Philosophical Logic 16 (3). 1987.
  •  3
  •  290
    Epistemology of mathematics: What are the questions? What count as answers?
    Philosophical Quarterly 61 (242): 130-150. 2011.
    A paper in this journal by Fraser MacBride, ‘Can Ante Rem Structuralism Solve the Access Problem?’, raises important issues concerning the epistemological goals and burdens of contemporary philosophy of mathematics, and perhaps philosophy of science and other disciplines as well. I use a response to MacBride's paper as a framework for developing a broadly holistic framework for these issues, and I attempt to steer a middle course between reductive foundationalism and extreme naturalistic quietis…Read more
  •  44
    On the notion of effectiveness
    History and Philosophy of Logic 1 (1-2): 209-230. 1980.
    This paper focuses on two notions of effectiveness which are not treated in detail elsewhere. Unlike the standard computability notion, which is a property of functions themselves, both notions of effectiveness are properties of interpreted linguistic presentations of functions. It is shown that effectiveness is epistemically at least as basic as computability in the sense that decisions about computability normally involve judgments concerning effectiveness. There are many occurrences of the pr…Read more
  •  148
    ‘Neo-logicist‘ logic is not epistemically innocent
    with Alan Weir
    Philosophia Mathematica 8 (2): 160--189. 2000.
    The neo-logicist argues tliat standard mathematics can be derived by purely logical means from abstraction principles—such as Hume's Principle— which are held to lie 'epistcmically innocent'. We show that the second-order axiom of comprehension applied to non-instantiated properties and the standard first-order existential instantiation and universal elimination principles are essential for the derivation of key results, specifically a theorem of infinity, but have not been shown to be epistemic…Read more
  •  138
  •  131
    Mathematics and philosophy of mathematics
    Philosophia Mathematica 2 (2): 148-160. 1994.
    The purpose of this note is to examine the relationship between the practice of mathematics and the philosophy of mathematics, ontology in particular. One conclusion is that the enterprises are (or should be) closely related, with neither one dominating the other. One cannot 'read off' the correct way to do mathematics from the true ontology, for example, nor can one ‘read off’ the true ontology from mathematics as practiced.
  •  4
    Book Reviews (review)
    Mind 101 (402): 361-364. 1992.