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Leon Horsten

Universität Konstanz
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  • Universität Konstanz
    Department of Philosophy
    Professor
Catholic University of Louvain
Institut supérieur de philosophie
PhD, 1993
Areas of Interest
Logic and Philosophy of Logic
Philosophy of Mathematics
  • All publications (97)
  •  88
    Modal-Epistemic Variants of Shapiro’s System of Epistemic Arithmetic
    Notre Dame Journal of Formal Logic 35 (2): 284-291. 1994.
    Logic and Philosophy of LogicEpistemic Logic
  • Gomperts, M.C., Neeltje komt dinsdag in evakostuum (review)
    Tijdschrift Voor Filosofie 55 (3): 571. 1993.
  • The Semantical Paradoxes, the Neutrality of Truth and the Neutrality of the Minimalist Theory of Truth
    In P. Cartois (ed.), The Many Problems of Realism (Studies in the General Philosophy of Science: Volume 3), Tilberg University Press. 1995.
    Liar ParadoxMinimalism about Truth
  •  88
    Canonical naming systems
    Minds and Machines 15 (2): 229-257. 2004.
    This paper outlines a framework for the abstract investigation of the concept of canonicity of names and of naming systems. Degrees of canonicity of names and of naming systems are distinguished. The structure of the degrees is investigated, and a notion of relative canonicity is defined. The notions of canonicity are formally expressed within a Carnapian system of second-order modal logic.
    Philosophy of Artificial IntelligenceAreas of Mathematics
  •  65
    Remarks on the content and extension of the notion of provability
    Logique Et Analyse 48 (189-192): 15-32. 2005.
    IntentionalityThe Nature of ContentsConceptual and Nonconceptual Content
  •  266
    An argument concerning the unknowable
    Analysis 69 (2): 240-242. 2009.
    Williamson has forcefully argued that Fitch's argument shows that the domain of the unknowable is non-empty. And he exhorts us to make more inroads into the land of the unknowable. Concluding his discussion of Fitch's argument, he writes: " Once we acknowledge that [the domain of the unknowable] is non-empty, we can explore more effectively its extent. … We are only beginning to understand the deeper limits of our knowledge. " I shall formulate and evaluate a new argument concerning the domain o…Read more
    Williamson has forcefully argued that Fitch's argument shows that the domain of the unknowable is non-empty. And he exhorts us to make more inroads into the land of the unknowable. Concluding his discussion of Fitch's argument, he writes: " Once we acknowledge that [the domain of the unknowable] is non-empty, we can explore more effectively its extent. … We are only beginning to understand the deeper limits of our knowledge. " I shall formulate and evaluate a new argument concerning the domain of the unknowable. It is an argument about knowability. More specifically, it is an argument about what we can know about the natural numbers. Since the domain of discourse will be the natural numbers structure, the notion of knowability can for the purposes of the argument be identified with a priori knowability or – which amounts to the same thing – absolute provability .Suppose, for a reductio, that there exists a property θ of natural numbers such that it is provable that for some natural number n, θ is true but unprovable. …
    Principles of KnowledgeEpistemic ParadoxesKnowability
  •  109
    Platonistic formalism
    Erkenntnis 54 (2): 173-194. 2001.
    The present paper discusses a proposal which says,roughly and with several qualifications, that thecollection of mathematical truths is identical withthe set of theorems of ZFC. It is argued that thisproposal is not as easily dismissed as outright falseor philosophically incoherent as one might think. Some morals of this are drawn for the concept ofmathematical knowledge.
    Epistemology of Mathematics
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