-
161Singular Propositions, Abstract Constituents, and Propositional AttitudesIn Joseph Almog, John Perry & Howard Wettstein (eds.), Themes From Kaplan, Oxford University Press. pp. 455--78. 1989.The author resolves a conflict between Frege's view that the cognitive significance of coreferential names may be distinct and Kaplan's view that since coreferential names have the same "character", they have the same cognitive significance. A distinction is drawn between an expression's "character" and its "cognitive character". The former yields the denotation of an expression relative to a context (and individual); the latter yields the abstract sense of an expression relative to a context …Read more
-
282Reflections on mathematicsIn V. F. Hendricks & Hannes Leitgeb (eds.), Philosophy of Mathematics: Five Questions, Automatic Press/vip. 2007.This paper contains answers to the following Five questions, posed by the editors are answered: (1) Why were you initially drawn to the foundations of mathematics and/or the philosophy of mathematics? (2) What example(s) from your work (or the work of others) illustrates the use of mathematics for philosophy? (3) What is the proper role of philosophy of mathematics in relation to logic, foundations of mathematics, the traditional core areas of mathematics, and science? (4) What do you consider t…Read more
-
372Natural Numbers and Natural Cardinals as Abstract Objects: A Partial Reconstruction of Frege"s Grundgesetze in Object TheoryJournal of Philosophical Logic 28 (6): 619-660. 1999.In this paper, the author derives the Dedekind-Peano axioms for number theory from a consistent and general metaphysical theory of abstract objects. The derivation makes no appeal to primitive mathematical notions, implicit definitions, or a principle of infinity. The theorems proved constitute an important subset of the numbered propositions found in Frege's *Grundgesetze*. The proofs of the theorems reconstruct Frege's derivations, with the exception of the claim that every number has a suc…Read more
-
135Gottlob FregeStanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. 2008.This entry introduces the reader to the main ideas in Frege's philosophy of logic, mathematics, and language.
-
65A solution to the problem of updating encyclopediasComputers and the Humanities 31 (1): 47-60. 1997.This paper describes a way of creating and maintaining a `dynamic encyclopedia', i.e., an encyclopedia whose entries can be improved and updated on a continual basis without requiring the production of an entire new edition. Such an encyclopedia is therefore responsive to new developments and new research. We discuss our implementation of a dynamic encyclopedia and the problems that we had to solve along the way. We also discuss ways of automating the administration of the encyclopedia.
-
179A comparison of two intensional logicsLinguistics and Philosophy 11 (1): 59-89. 1988.The author examines the differences between the general intensional logic defined in his recent book and Montague's intensional logic. Whereas Montague assigned extensions and intensions to expressions (and employed set theory to construct these values as certain sets), the author assigns denotations to terms and relies upon an axiomatic theory of intensional entities that covers properties, relations, propositions, worlds, and other abstract objects. It is then shown that the puzzles for Montag…Read more
-
179Two (related) world viewsNoûs 29 (2): 189-211. 1995.A. Plantinga develops a challenging critique of Castañeda's guise theory, by identifying fundamental intuitions that guise theory gives up and by developing several objections to the guise-theoretic world view as a whole. In this paper, I examine whether Plantinga's criticisms apply to the theory of abstract objects. The theory of abstract objects and guise theory can be fruitfully compared because they share a common intellectual heritage---both follow Ernst Mally [1912] in postulating a spec…Read more
-
231The Stanford encyclopedia of philosophy: A developed dynamic reference workIn James H. Moor & Terrell Ward Bynum (eds.), Cyberphilosophy: the intersection of philosophy and computing, Blackwell. pp. 210-228. 2002.In this entry, the authors outline the goals of a "dynamic reference work", and explain how the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy has been designed to achieve those goals.
-
42Philosophy and the world wide webAmerican Philosophical Association Newsletter on Computer Use in Philosophy 94 (2): 29-33. 1995.In this note, I plan to describe some of the procedures I followed in creating the World Wide Web site for the Metaphysics Research Lab at CSLI. Its URL (Uniform Resource Locator) is.
-
362Worlds and Propositions Set FreeErkenntnis 79 (4). 2014.The authors provide an object-theoretic analysis of two paradoxes in the theory of possible worlds and propositions stemming from Russell and Kaplan. After laying out the paradoxes, the authors provide a brief overview of object theory and point out how syntactic restrictions that prevent object-theoretic versions of the classical paradoxes are justified philosophically. The authors then trace the origins of the Russell paradox to a problematic application of set theory in the definition of worl…Read more
-
96Mally's Determinates and Husserl's NoemataIn Alexander Hieke (ed.), Ernst Mally - Versuch einer Neubewertung, Academia Verlag. 1998.In this paper, the author compares passages from two philosophically important texts and concludes that they have fundamental ideas in common. What makes this comparison and conclusion interesting is that the texts come from two different traditions in philosophy, the analytic and the phenomenological. In 1912, Ernst Mally published *Gegenstandstheoretische Grundlagen der Logik und Logistik*, an analytic work containing a combination of formal logic and metaphysics. In 1913, Edmund Husserl pu…Read more
Stanford, California, United States of America
Areas of Specialization
| Metaphysics and Epistemology |
| Philosophy of Mathematics |
| Formal Philosophy |
| Computational Philosophy |