AN “i” FOR ANi: SINGULAR TERMS, UNIQUENESS, AND REFERENCE
From MaRDI portal
Publication:2919944
DOI10.1017/S1755020311000347zbMath1272.03041WikidataQ126370063 ScholiaQ126370063MaRDI QIDQ2919944
Publication date: 23 October 2012
Published in: The Review of Symbolic Logic (Search for Journal in Brave)
natural deductionphilosophy of languagedefinite descriptionssingular termsdonkey anaphoramathematical languagessingular pronouns
Philosophy of mathematics (00A30) Philosophical and critical aspects of logic and foundations (03A05)
Related Items
RAMSIFICATION AND SEMANTIC INDETERMINACY ⋮ Implicit Definitions, Second-Order Quantifiers, and the Robustness of the Logical Operators ⋮ Settings and misunderstandings in mathematics
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Three Varieties of Mathematical Structuralism†
- Identity, Indiscernibility, and ante rem Structuralism: The Tale of i and -i
- Platonism and Aristotelianism in Mathematics
- Criteria of Identity and Structuralist Ontology
- Frege's Theory of Real Numbers
- An Answer to Hellman's Question: ‘Does Category Theory Provide a Framework for Mathematical Structuralism?’†
- The Identity Problem for Realist Structuralism
- Meinongianism and the Philosophy of Mathematics†
- Does Category Theory Provide a Framework for Mathematical Structuralism?†
- Categories, Structures, and the Frege-Hilbert Controversy: The Status of Meta-mathematics
- Arbitrary reference in mathematical reasoning