•  253
    Book Reviews
    Oxford University Press. 1990.
  •  10
    Iterative Set Theory
    Philosophical Quarterly 43 (171): 178-193. 1993.
  •  4
    Book Reviews (review)
    Philosophical Quarterly 44 (174): 127-129. 1994.
  •  1
    Book Reviews (review)
    Philosophical Quarterly 41 (164): 345-348. 1991.
  •  11
    Proof and Knowledge in Mathematics
    Philosophical Books 34 (3): 188-191. 2009.
  •  197
    Wittgenstein's Tractatus: History and Interpretation (edited book)
    Oxford University Press. 2013.
    These new studies of Wittgenstein's Tractatus represent a significant step beyond recent polemical debate. They cover a wide range of themes, and show that close investigation into the composition of the Tractatus, and into the various influences on it, has much to yield in revealing the complexity and fertility of Wittgenstein's early thought.
  •  40
    Wittgenstein's Notes on Logic
    Oxford University Press. 2008.
    Wittgenstein's philosophical career began in 1911 when he went to Cambridge to work with Russell. He compiled the Notes on Logic two years later as a kind of summary of the work he had done so far. Russell thought that they were ‘as good as anything that has ever been done in logic’, but he had Wittgenstein himself to explain them to him. Without the benefit of Wittgenstein's explanations, most later scholars have preferred to treat the Notes solely as an interpretative aid in understanding the …Read more
  •  38
    This book is a critical examination of the astonishing progress made in the philosophical study of the properties of the natural numbers from the 1880s to the 1930s. It reassesses the brilliant innovations of Frege, Russell, Wittgenstein, and others, which transformed philosophy as well as the understanding of mathematics. The book argues that through the problem of arithmetic participates in the larger puzzle of the relationship between thought, language, experience, and the world, we can disti…Read more
  • Word perception and misperception in word and sentence context
    Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 27 (6): 489-489. 1989.
  •  34
    How realist is the Tractatus?
    Disputatio 10 (18). 2021.
    On the face of it the structure of the Tractatus has realism baked in. The book starts out from a world of facts, and then proceeds to argue in stages so as to arrive at a single form that any proposition representing how things stand in the world must have. It is only when we examine the details of this argument that this straightforwardly deductive argumentative structure begins to fall apart. When correctly understood, I suggest, Wittgenstein's stance is much more nuanced and less easy to cat…Read more
  •  4
    Ramsey's Transcendental Argument
    In Hallvard Lillehammer & D. H. Mellor (eds.), Ramsey's Legacy, Oxford University Press Uk. pp. 71--82. 2005.
  • Inaccessible Truths and Infinite Coincidences
    In J. Czermak (ed.), Philosophy of Mathematics, Hölder-pichler-tempsky. 1993.
  •  41
    In this book, Michael Potter offers a fresh and compelling portrait of the birth and first several decades of analytic philosophy, one of the most important periods in philosophy’s long history. He focuses on the period between the publication of Gottlob Frege’s _Begriffsschrift _in 1879 and Frank Ramsey’s death in 1930. Potter--one of the most influential writers on late 19 th and early 20 th century philosophy--presents a deep but accessible account of the break with Absolute Idealism and Neo-…Read more
  •  45
    I trace the history of Wittgenstein’s engagement with Russell’s external world programme from 1913 to 1929.
  •  34
    Reason's Nearest Kin: Philosophies of Arithmetic from Kant to Carnap (review)
    Erkenntnis 56 (2): 264-268. 2000.
  •  256
    IMichael Potter
    Aristotelian Society Supplementary Volume 73 (1): 63-73. 1999.
    Classifies accounts of arithmetic into four sorts according to the resources they appeal to in constructing its subject matter.
  •  64
    Intuition and Reflection in Arithmetic
    with Bob Hale
    Aristotelian Society Supplementary Volume 73 63-98. 1999.
    [Michael Potter] If arithmetic is not analytic in Kant's sense, what is its subject matter? Answers to this question can be classified into four sorts according as they posit logic, experience, thought or the world as the source, but in each case we need to appeal to some further process if we are to generate a structure rich enough to represent arithmetic as standardly practised. I speculate that this further process is our reflection on the subject matter already obtained. This suggestion seem…Read more
  •  185
    Frege: The Pure Business of Being True, by Charles Travis
    Mind 133 (532): 1175-1180. 2024.
    Travis is evidently a self-conscious prose stylist, by which I mean that he pays attention to the style of his prose, not that this style is worth emulating. On.
  •  142
    Intuitive and Regressive Justifications†
    Philosophia Mathematica 28 (3): 385-394. 2020.
    In his recent book, Quine, New Foundations, and the Philosophy of Set Theory, Sean Morris attempts to rehabilitate Quine’s NF as a possible foundation for mathematics. I explain why he does not succeed.
  •  52
    Propositions in Wittgenstein and Ramsey
    In Gabriele M. Mras, Paul Weingartner & Bernhard Ritter (eds.), Philosophy of Logic and Mathematics: Proceedings of the 41st International Ludwig Wittgenstein Symposium, De Gruyter. pp. 375-384. 2018.
    In Begriffsschrift Frege proposed to ignore the part of content that is irrelevant to logic; what remains he called “conceptual content”. In “On Sense and Reference” he renamed this “sense” but failed to stress that it is a notion belonging to the philosophy of logic, not of language. Russell seems to have seen the importance of the notion only briefly. Wittgenstein did not make use of the notion until he was in Norway, and only introduced the terminology of “sign” and “symbol” to mark the disti…Read more
  •  83
    Foundations Without Foundationalism: A Case for Second-Order Logic
    Philosophical Quarterly 44 (174): 127-129. 1994.
  •  74
    Critical Notices (review)
    Philosophical Quarterly 43 (172): 362-366. 1993.
  •  62
    Wittgenstein’s pre‐Tractatus manuscripts: a new appraisal
    In Peter Sullivan & Michael Potter (eds.), Wittgenstein's Tractatus: History and Interpretation, Oxford University Press. pp. 13-39. 2013.
    The early draft of the _Tractatus_ known as the _Prototractatus_ resides in a large hardback notebook which Brian McGuinness, in his discussion of its genesis, has dubbed _Bodleianus_. Its publication in 1971 enabled us to examine much more closely the process by which Wittgenstein composed the _Tractatus._ But when did he write it? This chapter reassesses the available evidence in an attempt to narrow down the possibilities as far as possible. In particular, the chapter discusses work of Geschk…Read more
  •  132
    Recarving Content: Hale's Final Proposal
    Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society 102 (3): 301-304. 2002.
    A follow-up, showing why Bob Hale's revision of his notion of weak sense is still inadequate.
  •  433
    Taming the Infinite (review)
    British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 47 (4): 609-619. 1996.
    A critique of Shaughan Lavine's attempt in /Understanding the Infinite/ to reduce talk about the infinite to finitely comprehensible terms.
  •  234
    Abstraction by Recarving
    Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society 101 (3): 327-338. 2001.
    Explains why Bob Hale's proposed notion of weak sense cannot explain the analyticity of Hume's principle as he claims. Argues that no other notion of the sort Hale wants could do the job either.