• Foreword
    Logique Et Analyse 46. 2003.
  • A Note On Paradoxes In Ethics
    The Baltic International Yearbook of Cognition, Logic and Communication 1. 2005.
  •  16
    The axiom of choice and inference to the best explanation
    Logique Et Analyse 49 191-197. 2006.
    An argument often given for adopting the Axiom of Choice as an axiom is that it has a lot of obviously true consequences. This looks like a legitimate application of the practice of Inference to the Best Explanation. However, the standard examples of obvious-truths-following-from-AC all turn out, on closer inspection, to involve a fallacy of equivocation. © 2012 Elsevier B.V., All rights reserved.
  •  46
    Permutations and stratified formulae a preservation theorem
    Mathematical Logic Quarterly 36 (5): 385-388. 1990.
  •  124
    A Note on Freedom from Detachment in the Logic of Paradox
    Notre Dame Journal of Formal Logic 54 (1): 15-20. 2013.
    We shed light on an old problem by showing that the logic LP cannot define a binary connective $\odot$ obeying detachment in the sense that every valuation satisfying $\varphi$ and $(\varphi\odot\psi)$ also satisfies $\psi$, except trivially. We derive this as a corollary of a more general result concerning variable sharing.
  •  383
    The iterative conception of set
    Review of Symbolic Logic 1 (1): 97-110. 2008.
    The phrase ‘The iterative conception of sets’ conjures up a picture of a particular settheoretic universe – the cumulative hierarchy – and the constant conjunction of phrasewith-picture is so reliable that people tend to think that the cumulative hierarchy is all there is to the iterative conception of sets: if you conceive sets iteratively, then the result is the cumulative hierarchy. In this paper, I shall be arguing that this is a mistake: the iterative conception of set is a good one, for al…Read more
  •  147
    Many mathematical objects arise from equivalence classes and invite implementation as those classes. Set-existence principles that would enable this are incompatible with ZFC's unrestricted _aussonderung_ but there are set theories which admit more instances than does ZF. NF provides equivalence classes for stratified relations only. Church's construction provides equivalence classes for "low" sets, and thus, for example, a set of all ordinals. However, that set has an ordinal in turn which is n…Read more
  •  147
    An Order-Theoretic Account of Some Set-Theoretic Paradoxes
    with Thierry Libert
    Notre Dame Journal of Formal Logic 52 (1): 1-19. 2011.
    We present an order-theoretic analysis of set-theoretic paradoxes. This analysis will show that a large variety of purely set-theoretic paradoxes (including the various Russell paradoxes as well as all the familiar implementations of the paradoxes of Mirimanoff and Burali-Forti) are all instances of a single limitative phenomenon
  •  79
    A Consistent Higher-Order Theory Without a Model
    Zeitschrift fur mathematische Logik und Grundlagen der Mathematik 35 (5): 385-386. 1989.
  •  98
    Decidable Fragments of the Simple Theory of Types with Infinity and $mathrm{NF}$
    with Anuj Dawar and Zachiri McKenzie
    Notre Dame Journal of Formal Logic 58 (3): 433-451. 2017.
    We identify complete fragments of the simple theory of types with infinity and Quine’s new foundations set theory. We show that TSTI decides every sentence ϕ in the language of type theory that is in one of the following forms: ϕ=∀x1r1⋯∀xkrk∃y1s1⋯∃ylslθ where the superscripts denote the types of the variables, s1>⋯>sl, and θ is quantifier-free, ϕ=∀x1r1⋯∀xkrk∃y1s⋯∃ylsθ where the superscripts denote the types of the variables and θ is quantifier-free. This shows that NF decides every stratified se…Read more
  •  50
    A Consistent Higher‐Order Theory Without a (Higher‐Order) Model
    Mathematical Logic Quarterly 35 (5): 385-386. 1989.