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32Chapter Three. Formalism and DeductivismIn Philosophy of Mathematics, Princeton University Press. pp. 38-55. 2017.
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26Chapter Two. Frege’s LogicismIn Philosophy of Mathematics, Princeton University Press. pp. 21-37. 2017.
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29Chapter Six. Empiricism about MathematicsIn Philosophy of Mathematics, Princeton University Press. pp. 88-100. 2017.
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33Chapter Ten. The Iterative Conception of SetsIn Philosophy of Mathematics, Princeton University Press. pp. 139-153. 2017.
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28Chapter Seven. NominalismIn Philosophy of Mathematics, Princeton University Press. pp. 101-115. 2017.
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25Chapter Twelve. The Quest for New AxiomsIn Philosophy of Mathematics, Princeton University Press. pp. 170-182. 2017.
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23Chapter Eleven. StructuralismIn Philosophy of Mathematics, Princeton University Press. pp. 154-169. 2017.
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19Chapter One. Mathematics as a Philosophical ChallengeIn Philosophy of Mathematics, Princeton University Press. pp. 4-20. 2017.
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22Chapter Five. IntuitionismIn Philosophy of Mathematics, Princeton University Press. pp. 73-87. 2017.
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28Chapter Eight. Mathematical IntuitionIn Philosophy of Mathematics, Princeton University Press. pp. 116-125. 2017.
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22Chapter Nine. Abstraction ReconsideredIn Philosophy of Mathematics, Princeton University Press. pp. 126-138. 2017.
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33Chapter Four. Hilbert’s ProgramIn Philosophy of Mathematics, Princeton University Press. pp. 56-72. 2017.
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691Actual and Potential InfinityNoûs 53 (1): 160-191. 2017.The notion of potential infinity dominated in mathematical thinking about infinity from Aristotle until Cantor. The coherence and philosophical importance of the notion are defended. Particular attention is paid to the question of whether potential infinity is compatible with classical logic or requires a weaker logic, perhaps intuitionistic.
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473Structuralism and the notion of dependencePhilosophical Quarterly 58 (230): 59-79. 2008.This paper has two goals. The first goal is to show that the structuralists’ claims about dependence are more significant to their view than is generally recognized. I argue that these dependence claims play an essential role in the most interesting and plausible characterization of this brand of structuralism. The second goal is to defend a compromise view concerning the dependence relations that obtain between mathematical objects. Two extreme views have tended to dominate the debate, namely the…Read more
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426Predicative fragments of Frege arithmeticBulletin of Symbolic Logic 10 (2): 153-174. 2004.Frege Arithmetic (FA) is the second-order theory whose sole non-logical axiom is Hume’s Principle, which says that the number of F s is identical to the number of Gs if and only if the F s and the Gs can be one-to-one correlated. According to Frege’s Theorem, FA and some natural definitions imply all of second-order Peano Arithmetic. This paper distinguishes two dimensions of impredicativity involved in FA—one having to do with Hume’s Principle, the other, with the underlying second-order logic—a…Read more
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404Metaontological MinimalismPhilosophy Compass 7 (2): 139-151. 2012.Can there be objects that are ‘thin’ in the sense that very little is required for their existence? A number of philosophers have thought so. For instance, many Fregeans believe it suffices for the existence of directions that there be lines standing in the relation of parallelism; other philosophers believe it suffices for a mathematical theory to have a model that the theory be coherent. This article explains the appeal of thin objects, discusses the three most important strategies for articul…Read more
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329Burgess on plural logic and set theoryPhilosophia Mathematica 15 (1): 79-93. 2007.John Burgess in a 2004 paper combined plural logic and a new version of the idea of limitation of size to give an elegant motivation of the axioms of ZFC set theory. His proposal is meant to improve on earlier work by Paul Bernays in two ways. I argue that both attempted improvements fail. I am grateful to Philip Welch, two anonymous referees, and especially Ignacio Jané for written comments on earlier versions of this paper, which have led to substantial improvements. Thanks also to the partici…Read more
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201Frege meets BrouwerReview of Symbolic Logic 8 (3): 540-552. 2015.We show that, by choosing definitions carefully, a version of Frege's theorem can be proved in intuitionistic logic.
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284Term Models for Abstraction PrinciplesJournal of Philosophical Logic 45 (1): 1-23. 2016.Kripke’s notion of groundedness plays a central role in many responses to the semantic paradoxes. Can the notion of groundedness be brought to bear on the paradoxes that arise in connection with abstraction principles? We explore a version of grounded abstraction whereby term models are built up in a ‘grounded’ manner. The results are mixed. Our method solves a problem concerning circularity and yields a ‘grounded’ model for the predicative theory based on Frege’s Basic Law V. However, the metho…Read more
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274To be is to be an FDialectica 59 (2). 2005.I defend the view that our ontology divides into categories, each with its own canonical way of identifying and distinguishing the objects it encompasses. For instance, I argue that natural numbers are identified and distinguished by their positions in the number sequence, and physical bodies, by facts having to do with spatiotemporal continuity. I also argue that objects belonging to different categories are ipso facto distinct. My arguments are based on an analysis of reference, which ascribes…Read more
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446Plural quantification exposedNoûs 37 (1). 2003.This paper criticizes George Boolos's famous use of plural quantification to argue that monadic second-order logic is pure logic. I deny that plural quantification qualifies as pure logic and express serious misgivings about its alleged ontological innocence. My argument is based on an examination of what is involved in our understanding of the impredicative plural comprehension schema.
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332On Witness-Discernibility of Elementary ParticlesErkenntnis 78 (5): 1133-1142. 2013.In the context of discussions about the nature of ‘identical particles’ and the status of Leibniz’s Principle of the Identity of Indiscernibles in Quantum Mechanics, a novel kind of physical discernibility has recently been proposed, which we call witness-discernibility. We inquire into how witness-discernibility relates to known kinds of discernibility. Our conclusion will be that for a wide variety of cases, including the intended quantum-mechanical ones, witness-discernibility collapses exten…Read more
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59Frege's context principle and reference to natural numbersIn Sten Lindstr©œm, Erik Palmgren, Krister Segerberg & Viggo Stoltenberg-Hansen (eds.), logicism, intuitionism, and formalism - What has become of them?, Springer. 2008.Frege proposed that his Context Principle—which says that a word has meaning only in the context of a proposition—can be used to explain reference, both in general and to mathematical objects in particular. I develop a version of this proposal and outline answers to some important challenges that the resulting account of reference faces. Then I show how this account can be applied to arithmetic to yield an explanation of our reference to the natural numbers and of their metaphysical status.
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314Aristotelian ContinuaPhilosophia Mathematica 24 (2): 214-246. 2016.In previous work, Hellman and Shapiro present a regions-based account of a one-dimensional continuum. This paper produces a more Aristotelian theory, eschewing the existence of points and the use of infinite sets or pluralities. We first show how to modify the original theory. There are a number of theorems that have to be added as axioms. Building on some work by Linnebo, we then show how to take the ‘potential’ nature of the usual operations seriously, by using a modal language, and we show th…Read more
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586The potential hierarchy of setsReview of Symbolic Logic 6 (2): 205-228. 2013.Some reasons to regard the cumulative hierarchy of sets as potential rather than actual are discussed. Motivated by this, a modal set theory is developed which encapsulates this potentialist conception. The resulting theory is equi-interpretable with Zermelo Fraenkel set theory but sheds new light on the set-theoretic paradoxes and the foundations of set theory.
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253Some Criteria for Acceptable AbstractionNotre Dame Journal of Formal Logic 52 (3): 331-338. 2011.Which abstraction principles are acceptable? A variety of criteria have been proposed, in particular irenicity, stability, conservativeness, and unboundedness. This note charts their logical relations. This answers some open questions and corrects some old answers
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