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4632The gödel paradox and Wittgenstein's reasonsPhilosophia Mathematica 17 (2): 208-219. 2009.An interpretation of Wittgenstein’s much criticized remarks on Gödel’s First Incompleteness Theorem is provided in the light of paraconsistent arithmetic: in taking Gödel’s proof as a paradoxical derivation, Wittgenstein was drawing the consequences of his deliberate rejection of the standard distinction between theory and metatheory. The reasoning behind the proof of the truth of the Gödel sentence is then performed within the formal system itself, which turns out to be inconsistent. It is show…Read more
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120Modal Noneism: Transworld Identity, Identification, and IndividuationAustralasian Journal of Logic 11 (2). 2014.Noneism a is form of Meinongianism, proposed by Richard Routley and developed and improved by Graham Priest in his widely discussed book Towards Non-Being. Priest's noneism is based upon the double move of building a worlds semantics including impossible worlds, besides possible ones, and admitting a new comprehension principle for objects, differerent from the ones proposed in other kinds of neo-Meinongian theories, such as Parsons' and Zalta's. The new principle has no restrictions on the sets…Read more
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889Impossible WorldsStanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy 2013. 2013.It is a venerable slogan due to David Hume, and inherited by the empiricist tradition, that the impossible cannot be believed, or even conceived. In Positivismus und Realismus, Moritz Schlick claimed that, while the merely practically impossible is still conceivable, the logically impossible, such as an explicit inconsistency, is simply unthinkable. An opposite philosophical tradition, however, maintains that inconsistencies and logical impossibilities are thinkable, and sometimes believable, to…Read more
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1714Conceivability and possibility: some dilemmas for HumeansSynthese 195 (6): 2697-2715. 2018.The Humean view that conceivability entails possibility can be criticized via input from cognitive psychology. A mainstream view here has it that there are two candidate codings for mental representations (one of them being, according to some, reducible to the other): the linguistic and the pictorial, the difference between the two consisting in the degree of arbitrariness of the representation relation. If the conceivability of P at issue for Humeans involves the having of a linguistic mental r…Read more
St Andrews, United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland
Areas of Specialization
2 more
| Logic and Philosophy of Logic |
| Formal Epistemology |
| Doxastic and Epistemic Logic |
| Metaphysics |
| Modality |
| Metaontology |
| Philosophy of Computing and Information |