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10Love of Fate and a Talmudic SageSophia 1-13. forthcoming.In this paper we present a philosophical examination of love of fate in the Talmud. While love of fate—or amor fati—is something most would associate with Nietzsche, we show that a version of it is present in the story of the Third Century Amora Elazer ben Pedat. Elazer ben Pedat was a poor man who was given the opportunity by God to restart all of creation. He chose not to do so, despite the tribulations he suffered in this world. It is precisely this rejection of the alternative world that res…Read more
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5Nothing New Under the SunErgo: An Open Access Journal of Philosophy 9 (n/a). 2023.All is vanity, we learn early in Ecclesiastes. This is motivated by the mysterious aphorism that there is nothing new under the sun. But what does it mean to say that there is nothing new under the sun? One might interpret this as a statement of the Eternal Return of the past. Alternatively, one could understand it as a statement what we call the Eternal Withering of the past. Eternal Withering is the view that the present draws from the past but not all of the past repeats. We argue that Eterna…Read more
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560Intuitionism, Justification Logic, and Doxastic ReasoningDissertation, The Graduate Center, City University of New York. 2024.In this Dissertation, we examine a handful of related themes in the philosophy of logic and mathematics. We take as a starting point the deeply philosophical, and—as we argue, deeply Kantian—views of L.E.J. Brouwer, the founder of intuitionism. We examine his famous first act of intuitionism. Therein, he put forth both a critical and a constructive idea. This critical idea involved digging a philosophical rift between what he thought of himself as doing and what he thought of his contemporaries,…Read more
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38Nothing New Under the SunErgo: An Open Access Journal of Philosophy 9 (n/a). 2022.All is vanity, we learn early in Ecclesiastes. This is motivated by the mysterious aphorism that there is nothing new under the sun. But what does it mean to say that there is nothing new under the sun? One might interpret this as a statement of the Eternal Return of the past. Alternatively, one could understand it as a statement what we call the Eternal Withering of the past. Eternal Withering is the view that the present draws from the past but not all of the past repeats. We argue that Eterna…Read more
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77What is Intuitionistic Arithmetic?Erkenntnis 89 (8): 3351-3376. 2024.L.E.J. Brouwer famously took the subject’s intuition of time to be foundational and from there ventured to build up mathematics. Despite being largely critical of formal methods, Brouwer valued axiomatic systems for their use in both communication and memory. Through the Dutch Mathematical Society, Gerrit Mannoury posed a challenge in 1927 to provide an axiomatization of intuitionistic arithmetic. Arend Heyting’s 1928 axiomatization was chosen as the winner and has since enjoyed the status of be…Read more
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787A Note on Consistency and PlatonismIn Alfredo Roque Freire & V. Alexis Peluce (eds.), 43rd International Wittgenstein Symposium proceedings. forthcoming.Is consistency the sort of thing that could provide a guide to mathematical ontology? If so, which notion of consistency suits this purpose? Mark Balaguer holds such a view in the context of platonism, the view that mathematical objects are non-causal, non-spatiotemporal, and non-mental. For the purposes of this paper, we will examine several notions of consistency with respect to how they can provide a platon-ist epistemology of mathematics. Only a Gödelian notion, we suggest, can provide a sat…Read more
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46On Martin-Löf’s Constructive OptimismStudia Semiotyczne 34 (1): 233-242. 2020.In his 1951 Gibbs Memorial Lecture, Kurt Gödel put forth his famous disjunction that either the power of the mind outstrips that of any machine or there are absolutely unsolvable problems. The view that there are no absolutely unsolvable problems is optimism, the view that there are such problems is pessimism. In his 1995—and, revised in 2013—Verificationism Then and Now, Per Martin-Löf presents an illustrative argument for a constructivist form of optimism. In response to that argument, Solomon…Read more
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56On Quine’s Translation ArgumentTopoi 38 (2): 315-320. 2019.Quine's translation argumnent figures centrally in his views on logic. The goal of this paper is to get clear on that argument. It can be interpreted as an argument to the effect that one should never translate somebody’s speech as going against a law of the translator’s logic. Key to this reading of the translation argument is the premise that one should never translate somebody's speech such that their speech is unintelligible. Ultimately, it is my aim to reject this reading. I argue that only…Read more