Neo-Fregeanism: an embarrassment of riches
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Publication:558727
DOI10.1305/NDJFL/1082637613zbMath1071.03006OpenAlexW1971020770MaRDI QIDQ558727
Publication date: 13 July 2005
Published in: Notre Dame Journal of Formal Logic (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1305/ndjfl/1082637613
Philosophical and critical aspects of logic and foundations (03A05) Nonclassical and second-order set theories (03E70) Other set-theoretic hypotheses and axioms (03E65)
Related Items (14)
FOR BETTER AND FOR WORSE. ABSTRACTIONISM, GOOD COMPANY, AND PLURALISM ⋮ HUME’S PRINCIPLE, BAD COMPANY, AND THE AXIOM OF CHOICE ⋮ TWO-SORTED FREGE ARITHMETIC IS NOT CONSERVATIVE ⋮ Cardinality and acceptable abstraction ⋮ Iteration one more time ⋮ Bad company objection to Joongol Kim's adverbial theory of numbers ⋮ What is Neologicism? ⋮ Focus restored: Comments on John MacFarlane ⋮ Bad company and neo-Fregean philosophy ⋮ The good, the bad and the ugly ⋮ Hume's big brother: Counting concepts and the bad company objection ⋮ Bad company generalized ⋮ Introduction to the special issue on the bad company problem ⋮ DEDUCTIVE CARDINALITY RESULTS AND NUISANCE-LIKE PRINCIPLES
Cites Work
- Classical harmony
- On the consistency of the first-order portion of Frege's logical system
- Finitude and Hume's principle
- Reals by Abstractiont
- ‘Neo-Logicist‘ Logic is not Epistemically Innocent
- Beyond first-order logic: the historical interplay between mathematical logic and axiomatic set theory
- The Consistency of predicative fragments of frege’s grundgesetze der arithmetik
- New V, ZF and Abstraction†
- On the Necessary Existence of Numbers
- The Definability of Cardinal Numbers
- Is Hume's principle analytic?
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