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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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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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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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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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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.
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1255Where do the natural numbers come from?Synthese 84 (3): 347-407. 1983.This paper presents a model-theoretic semantics for discourse "about" natural numbers, one that captures what I call "the mathematical-object picture", but avoids what I can "the mathematical-object theory".
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180Meeting of the association for symbolic logic: New York 1979Journal of Symbolic Logic 46 (2): 427-434. 1981.
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1316On The Sense and Reference of A Logical ConstantPhilosophical Quarterly 54 (214): 134-165. 2004.Logicism is, roughly speaking, the doctrine that mathematics is fancy logic. So getting clear about the nature of logic is a necessary step in an assessment of logicism. Logic is the study of logical concepts, how they are expressed in languages, their semantic values, and the relationships between these things and the rest of our concepts, linguistic expressions, and their semantic values. A logical concept is what can be expressed by a logical constant in a language. So the question “What is l…Read more