•  16
    Contents
    with Jon Elster, Dagfinn Føllesdal, Patrick Suppes, David Woodruff Smith, Christian Beyer, Michael Friedman, Graciela De Pierris, Wilhelm K. Essler, Nils Roll-Hansen, Charles Parsons, Dag Prawitz, Olav Gjelsvik, John Perry, and Michael Frauchiger
    In Michael Frauchiger (ed.), Reference, Rationality, and Phenomenology: Themes from Føllesdal, De Gruyter. 2013.
  •  2
    Platonism in the Philosophy of Mathematics
    Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. 2009.
  •  15
    The Context Principle in Frege’s Grundgesetze
    In Philip A. Ebert & Marcus Rossberg (eds.), Essays on Frege's Basic Laws of Arithmetic, Oxford University Press. pp. 90-114. 2019.
    According to Frege’s context principle, we must never to ask for the meaning of a word in isolation but only in the context of a sentence. The context principle poses some very hard interpretive challenges; not only are the ideas themselves hard, but relevant parts of Frege’s view change in the course of his career. This principle plays a crucial role in the _Grundlagen_, especially in Frege’s answer to the question of how numbers and other logical objects are ‘given to us’. By contrast, the con…Read more
  •  38
    Potentialism Demodalized
    Review of Symbolic Logic 19 (2): 291-316. 2026.
    Potentialism holds that certain objects are successively generated in an incompletable process. While it is natural to analyze this view modally, there are theorems that connect the resulting modal analysis of potentialism with the non-modal languages of ordinary mathematics. By extending this approach to plural languages, this article proves a far stronger result about definitional equivalence. This opens the door to a new and entirely non-modal explication of potentialism, using a restricted p…Read more
  •  1
    Plural Quantification
    Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. 2004.
  •  3
    On the Permissibility of Impredicative Comprehension
    In Ivette Fred Rivera & Jessica Leech (eds.), Being Necessary: Themes of Ontology and Modality from the Work of Bob Hale., Oxford University Press. pp. 170-187. 2018.
    Which comprehension axioms of higher-order logic are acceptable? That is, under what conditions does a formula define a concept or circumscribe some objects? It is well known that unrestricted higher-order comprehension is incompatible with unrestricted reification of higher-order entities. In search of a response to this conflict, an argument against all forms of impredicative comprehension is formulated; for example, when defining a concept, we may not quantify over a totality to which this co…Read more
  •  6
    How to Harness Basic Law V
    In Massimiliano Carrara, Alexandra Arapinis & Friederike Moltmann (eds.), Unity and Plurality: Logic, Philosophy, and Linguistics, Oxford University Press Uk. pp. 19-32. 2016.
    Frege’s Basic Law V says that two concepts have the same extension just in case they are coextensive. This chapter challenges the orthodoxy that the “law” must be rejected because of Russell's paradox. It is argued that pressure remains to accept something like Basic Law V, and that this pressure can be accommodated without inconsistency by adopting a richer logical framework than usual. This controlled use of Basic Law V is shown to open up new approaches to set theory and the logical paradoxes…Read more
  •  26
    Ontology and the Algebraic Conception of Logic
    In Xavier de Donato-Rodríguez, José L. Falguera & Concha Martínez-Vidal (eds.), Deflationist Conceptions of Abstract Objects, Springer Nature Switzerland. pp. 143-152. 2025.
    I articulate and defend the thesis that first-order logic is algebraic, in the sense that it does not have a single canonical application to reality. If correct, this thesis supports a flexible conception of ontology. Suppose we have a first-order language that purports to talk about certain objects, say Fs, whose conditions for correct use are expressed in terms that are already assumed to be in good standing and thus, in particular, involve no talk about Fs. Suppose further that these assertab…Read more
  •  98
    Charles Dacre Parsons passed away on April 19, 2024, aged 91. In this obituary, four of his PhD students and one colleague and collaborator discuss, in an order (roughly) determined by the development of Parsons’s career, his engagement with proof theory; Quine; Kant; Brouwer and Gödel; and mathematical structuralism.
  • Definiteness in early set theory
    Journal for the Philosophy of Mathematics 1 (1): 43-62. 2024.
    The notion of definiteness has played a fundamental role in the early developments of set theory. We consider its role in work of Cantor, Zermelo and Weyl. We distinguish two very different forms of definiteness. First, a condition can be definite in the sense that, given any object, either the condition applies to that object or it does not. We call this intensional definiteness. Second, a condition or collection can be definite in the sense that, loosely speaking, a totality of its instances o…Read more
  •  28
    Maddy on Classes
    In Sophia Arbeiter & Juliette Kennedy (eds.), The Philosophy of Penelope Maddy, Springer Verlag. pp. 65-79. 2024.
    Classes have been a central and recurring theme in Penelope Maddy’s work. This article reviews and critiques her discussion of these matters. She offers a very perceptive analysis of the problem posed by classes and argues convincingly in favor of a “logical conception” of them. But her attempt to develop such a conception suffers from various shortcomings. I therefore outline some attempts to do better.
  •  788
    What to Do When Experts Disagree
    In Peter Brössel, Anna-Maria Asunta Eder & Thomas Grundmann (eds.), The Epistemology of Experts: New Essays, Routledge. 2026.
    How should a layperson respond to learning that the experts on a given topic disagree amongst themselves? This paper argues that, epistemically, the appropriate response to an expert disagreement depends greatly on what explains the disagreement, and that there are several quite different types of explanations for a given disagreement. Accordingly, expert disagreement calls for different epistemic responses in different circumstances. However, the paper also supplements this pluralist account of…Read more
  •  108
    Why thin objects rather than ultra-thin?
    Inquiry: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Philosophy 68 (7): 2575-2588. 2025.
    In Thin Objects, I articulated a thin conception of objecthood according to which the existence of objects need not make any substantive demands on reality. Agustín Rayo has developed and defended an even less demanding conception of objecthood, which drops the requirement of informative criteria of identity. The nature and extent of the disagreement is clarified, and two clusters of advantages of the thin conception are presented. In essence, by invoking criteria of identity we obtain more robu…Read more
  • Critical Views of Logic (edited book)
    with Mirja Hartimo and Frode Kjosavik
  •  656
    Introduction to Constructional Ontology
    Proceedings of the Joint Ontology Workshops 1-14. 2024.
    In constructional ontology, entities emerge by construction, that is, from the application of constructors to objects. We explore this approach to ontology, focusing on three modules: the constructors, the inputs to the constructors, and the constructional process. Our aim is to identify and assess some key theoretical choices arising in an ontology of this kind.
  •  115
    Predicative Classes and Strict Potentialism
    Philosophia Mathematica 34 (1). 2026.
    While sets are combinatorial collections, defined by their elements, classes are logical collections, defined by their membership conditions. We develop, in a potentialist setting, a predicative approach to (logical) classes of (combinatorial) sets. Some reasons emerge to adopt a stricter form of potentialism, which insists, not only that each object is generated at some stage of an incompletable process, but also that each truth is “made true” at some such stage. The natural logic of this stric…Read more
  •  35
    Plural quantification
    In Ed Zalta (ed.), Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy, Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. 2012.
  •  102
    Aristotle argued that paradoxes of the infinite can be avoided only by insisting that all infinities are potential, not actual. There is a long tradition of thinking that a Judeo-Christian God would collapse potential infinities to actual ones, thus removing the Aristotelian guard-rail against paradox. After all, does not God know all numbers, regardless of whether they are actual or merely potential? We analyze the Aristotelian guard-rail of potentiality, as well as challenges to it due to Augu…Read more
  •  107
    Eklund, Maximalism, and the Problem of Incompatible Objects.
  •  1484
    Abstraction and grounding
    Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 109 (1): 357-390. 2023.
    The idea that some objects are metaphysically “cheap” has wide appeal. An influential version of the idea builds on abstractionist views in the philosophy of mathematics, on which numbers and other mathematical objects are abstracted from other phenomena. For example, Hume's Principle states that two collections have the same number just in case they are equinumerous, in the sense that they can be correlated one‐to‐one:. The principal aim of this article is to use the notion of grounding to deve…Read more
  •  160
    No Easy Road to Impredicative Definabilism
    Philosophia Mathematica 32 (1): 21-33. 2024.
    Bob Hale has defended a new conception of properties that is broadly Fregean in two key respects. First, like Frege, Hale insists that every property can be defined by an open formula. Second, like Frege, but unlike later definabilists, Hale seeks to justify full impredicative property comprehension. The most innovative part of his defense, we think, is a “definability constraint” that can serve as an implicit definition of the domain of properties. We make this constraint formally precise and p…Read more
  •  118
    Our first goal here is to show how one can use a modal language to explicate potentiality and incomplete or indeterminate domains in mathematics, along the lines of previous work. We then show how potentiality bears on some longstanding items of concern to Mark Steiner: the applicability of mathematics, explanation, and de re propositional attitudes toward mathematical objects.
  •  217
    Rumfitt on the logic of set theory
    Inquiry: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Philosophy 62 (7): 826-841. 2019.
    According to a famous argument by Dummett, the concept of set is indefinitely extensible, and the logic appropriate for reasoning about the instances of any such concept is intuitionistic, not classical. But Dummett's argument is widely regarded as obscure. This note explains how the final chapter of Rumfitt's important new book advances our understanding of Dummett's argument, but it also points out some problems and unanswered questions. Finally, Rumfitt's reconstruction of Dummett's argument …Read more
  •  195
    Cardinality and Acceptable Abstraction
    Notre Dame Journal of Formal Logic 59 (1): 61-74. 2018.
    It is widely thought that the acceptability of an abstraction principle is a feature of the cardinalities at which it is satisfiable. This view is called into question by a recent observation by Richard Heck. We show that a fix proposed by Heck fails but we analyze the interesting idea on which it is based, namely that an acceptable abstraction has to “generate” the objects that it requires. We also correct and complete the classification of proposed criteria for acceptable abstraction.
  •  185
    Replies
    Theoria 89 (3): 393-406. 2023.
    Thin Objects has two overarching ambitions. The first is to clarify and defend the idea that some objects are ‘thin’, in the sense that their existence does not make a substantive demand on reality. The second is to develop a systematic and well-motivated account of permissible abstraction, thereby solving the so-called ‘bad company problem’. Here I synthesise the book by briefly commenting on what I regard as its central themes.
  •  231
    Précis
    Theoria 89 (3): 247-255. 2023.
    Thin Objects has two overarching ambitions. The first is to clarify and defend the idea that some objects are ‘thin’, in the sense that their existence does not make a substantive demand on reality. The second is to develop a systematic and well-motivated account of permissible abstraction, thereby solving the so-called ‘bad company problem’. Here I synthesise the book by briefly commenting on what I regard as its central themes.