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David D. Auerbach

North Carolina State University
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  •  Publications
    6
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 More details
  • North Carolina State University
    Department of Philosophy and Religious Studies
    Retired faculty
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Department of Linguistics and Philosophy
PhD, 1978
Raleigh, North Carolina, United States of America
Areas of Specialization
Science, Logic, and Mathematics
Logic and Philosophy of Logic
Philosophy of Mathematics
Areas of Interest
Metaphysics
Philosophy of Language
Philosophy of Mind
Logic and Philosophy of Logic
Philosophy of Computing and Information
Philosophy of Mathematics
Science, Logic, and Mathematics
2 more
  • All publications (6)
  •  157
    Michael Detlefsen, Hilbert's program. An essay on mathematical instrumentalism. Synthese library, vol. 182, D. Reidel Publishing Company, Dordrecht etc. 1986, xiv + 186 pp
    Journal of Symbolic Logic 54 (2): 620-622. 1989.
    Logic and Philosophy of Logic, Miscellaneous
  •  108
    Proof and knowledge in mathematics, edited by Michael Detlefsen, Routledge, London and New York1992, x + 256 pp
    Journal of Symbolic Logic 59 (3): 1105-1107. 1994.
    Proof Theory
  •  114
    Review: S. G. Shanker, Godel's Theorem in Focus (review)
    Journal of Symbolic Logic 58 (1): 365-366. 1993.
    Logic and Philosophy of LogicLogic and Philosophy of Logic, Miscellaneous
  •  1183
    Intensionality and the gödel theorems
    Philosophical Studies 48 (3): 337--51. 1985.
    Philosophers of language have drawn on metamathematical results in varied ways. Extensionalist philosophers have been particularly impressed with two, not unrelated, facts: the existence, due to Frege/Tarski, of a certain sort of semantics, and the seeming absence of intensional contexts from mathematical discourse. The philosophical import of these facts is at best murky. Extensionalists will emphasize the success and clarity of the model theoretic semantics; others will emphasize the relative …Read more
    Philosophers of language have drawn on metamathematical results in varied ways. Extensionalist philosophers have been particularly impressed with two, not unrelated, facts: the existence, due to Frege/Tarski, of a certain sort of semantics, and the seeming absence of intensional contexts from mathematical discourse. The philosophical import of these facts is at best murky. Extensionalists will emphasize the success and clarity of the model theoretic semantics; others will emphasize the relative poverty of the mathematical idiom; still others will question the aptness of the standard extensional semantics for mathematics. In this paper I investigate some implications of the Gödel Second Incompleteness Theorem for these positions. I argue that the realm of mathematics, proof theory in particular, has been a breeding ground for intensionality and that satisfactory intensional semantic theories are implicit in certain rigorous technical accounts.
    Godel's TheoremPhilosophy of Mathematics, General Works
  •  1068
    How to Say Things with Formalisms
    In Michael Detlefsen (ed.), Proof, Logic and Formalization, Routledge. pp. 77--93. 2005.
    Recent attention to "self-consistent" (Rosser-style) systems raises anew the question of the proper interpretation of the Gödel Second Incompleteness Theorem and its effect on Hilbert's Program. The traditional rendering and consequence is defended with new arguments justifying the intensional correctness of the derivability conditions.
    Godel's TheoremPhilosophy of Mathematics, General WorksLogical Semantics and Logical Truth
  •  298
    Saying It With Numerals
    Notre Dame Journal of Formal Logic 35 (1): 130-146. 1994.
    This article discusses the nature of numerals and the plausibility of their special semantic and epistemological status as proper names of numbers. Evidence is presented that minimizes the difference between numerals and other devices of direct reference. The availability of intensional contexts within formalised metamathematics is exploited to shed light on the relation between formal numerals and numerals.
    NumbersGodel's TheoremPhilosophy of Language, MiscQuantifiers
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