•  20
    In the first chapter I have introduced Carnapian intensional logic against the background of Frege's and Quine's puzzles. The main body of the dissertation consists of two parts. In the first part I discussed Carnapian modal logic and arithmetic with descriptions. In the second chapter, I have described three Carnapian theories, CCL, CFL, and CNL. All three theories have three things in common. First, they are formulated in languages containing description terms. Second, they contain a system of…Read more
  •  13
    Over denken
    Owl Press. forthcoming.
  •  10
    Divine Omniscience: Complete Knowledge or Supreme Knowledge?
    In Mirosław Szatkowski (ed.), Ontology of Divinity, De Gruyter. pp. 109-124. 2024.
    One of the divine attributes is omniscience. The standard concept of omniscience is the concept of having complete knowledge: God knows every truth. But there are also other concepts of omniscience that are consistent with having incomplete knowledge. I will propose a new concept of omniscience, namely the concept of having supreme knowledge. It is inspired by how Anselm talks about God's knowledge and it makes good sense of a key premise in an Anselmian argument for omniscience. Moreover, it ca…Read more
  •  7
    I will examine three claims made by Ackerman and Kripke. First, they claim that not any arithmetical terms is eligible for universal instantiation and existential generalisation in doxastic or epistemic contexts. Second, Ackerman claims that Peano numerals are eligible for universal instantiation and existential generalisation in doxastic or epistemic contexts. Kripke's position is a bit more subtle. Third, they claim that the successor relation and the smaller-than relation must be effectively …Read more
  • Carnapian Arithmetic with Descriptions
    In Weber Erik, Libert Thierry, Vanpaemel Geert & Marage P. (eds.), Logic, Philosophy and History of Science in Belgium. Proceedings of the Young Researchers Days 2008, Koninklijke Vlaamse Academie Van België Voor Wetenschappen En Kunsten. pp. 28-34. 2009.