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Where do the natural numbers come from?: In memory of Geoffrey JosephSynthese 84 (3): 347-407. 1990.
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The Modal Theory of Pure Identity and Some Related Decision ProblemsMathematical Logic Quarterly 30 (26‐29): 415-423. 2006.
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252Book Review. Existence and Logic. Milton Munitz. (review)Philosophical Review 85 (3): 404-08. 1976.
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264Book Review. Logic and Arithmetic, Volume I. D Bostock. (review)Journal of Philosophy 73 (6): 149-57. 1976.
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65Book reviews (review)History and Philosophy of Logic 14 (2): 221-263. 1993.Stewart Shapiro, Foundations without foundationalism: A case for second-order logic. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1991. xvii + 277 pp. £35.00 A. Diaz, J, Echeverria and A. Ibarra, Structures in...
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7Stewart Shapiro's Philosophy of Mathematics (review)Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 65 (2): 467-475. 2007.
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Report on some ramified-type assignment systems and their model-theoretic semanticsIn Nicholas Griffin & Bernard Linsky (eds.), The Palgrave Centenary Companion to Principia Mathematica, Palgrave-macmillan. 2013.
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997Where do sets come from?Journal of Symbolic Logic 56 (1): 150-175. 1991.A model-theoretic approach to the semantics of set-theoretic discourse.
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845Cardinality logics. Part II: Definability in languages based on `exactly'Journal of Symbolic Logic 53 (3): 765-784. 1988.
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1268Stewart Shapiro’s Philosophy of Mathematics (review)Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 65 (2). 2002.Two slogans define structuralism: contemporary mathematics studies structures; mathematical objects are places in those structures. Shapiro’s version of structuralism posits abstract objects of three sorts. A system is “a collection of objects with certain relations” between these objects. “An extended family is a system of people with blood and marital relationships.” A baseball defense, e.g., the Yankee’s defense in the first game of the 1999 World Series, is a also a system, “a collection of …Read more
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639Three Value Logics: An Introduction, A Comparison of Various Logical Lexica and Some Philosophical RemarksAnnals of Pure and Applied Logic 43 (2): 99-145. 1989.
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877Cut-conditions on sets of multiple-alternative inferencesMathematical Logic Quarterly 68 (1). 2022.I prove that the Boolean Prime Ideal Theorem is equivalent, under some weak set-theoretic assumptions, to what I will call the Cut-for-Formulas to Cut-for-Sets Theorem: for a set F and a binary relation |- on Power(F), if |- is finitary, monotonic, and satisfies cut for formulas, then it also satisfies cut for sets. I deduce the CF/CS Theorem from the Ultrafilter Theorem twice; each proof uses a different order-theoretic variant of the Tukey- Teichmüller Lemma. I then discuss relationships betwe…Read more
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1185One-step Modal Logics, Intuitionistic and Classical, Part 1Journal of Philosophical Logic 50 (5): 837-872. 2021.This paper and its sequel “look under the hood” of the usual sorts of proof-theoretic systems for certain well-known intuitionistic and classical propositional modal logics. Section 1 is preliminary. Of most importance: a marked formula will be the result of prefixing a formula in a propositional modal language with a step-marker, for this paper either 0 or 1. Think of 1 as indicating the taking of “one step away from 0.” Deductions will be constructed using marked formulas. Section 2 prese…Read more
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895One-Step Modal Logics, Intuitionistic and Classical, Part 2Journal of Philosophical Logic 50 (5): 873-910. 2021.Part 1 [Hodes, 2021] “looked under the hood” of the familiar versions of the classical propositional modal logic K and its intuitionistic counterpart. This paper continues that project, addressing some familiar classical strengthenings of K and GL), and their intuitionistic counterparts. Section 9 associates two intuitionistic one-step proof-theoretic systems to each of the just mentioned intuitionistic logics, this by adding for each a new rule to those which generated IK in Part 1. For the sys…Read more
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214Jan von Plato and Sara Negri, Structural Proof Theory (review)Philosophical Review 115 (2): 255-258. 2006.
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129Mechanism, Mentalism, and Metamathematics: An Essay on Finitism by Judson C. Webb (review)Journal of Philosophy 81 (8): 456-464. 1984.
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91Book Review. The Lambda-Calculus. H. P. Barendregt( (review)Philosophical Review 97 (1): 132-7. 1988.
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1223Why Ramify?Notre Dame Journal of Formal Logic 56 (2): 379-415. 2015.This paper considers two reasons that might support Russell’s choice of a ramified-type theory over a simple-type theory. The first reason is the existence of purported paradoxes that can be formulated in any simple-type language, including an argument that Russell considered in 1903. These arguments depend on certain converse-compositional principles. When we take account of Russell’s doctrine that a propositional function is not a constituent of its values, these principles turn out to be too …Read more
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928Ontological Commitments, Thick and ThinIn George Boolos (ed.), Method, Reason and Language: Essays in Honor of Hilary Putnam, Cambridge University Press. pp. 235-260. 1990.Discourse carries thin commitment to objects of a certain sort iff it says or implies that there are such objects. It carries a thick commitment to such objects iff an account of what determines truth-values for its sentences say or implies that there are such objects. This paper presents two model-theoretic semantics for mathematical discourse, one reflecting thick commitment to mathematical objects, the other reflecting only a thin commitment to them. According to the latter view, for example,…Read more
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320An Exact Pair for the Arithmetic Degrees whose join is not a Weak Uniform Upper Bound, in the Recursive Function Theory-Newsletters, No. 28, August-September 1982.
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Book Review. Logic and Its Limits. P Shaw. (review)History and Philosophy of Logic 5 (2): 251. 1984.