41 ideas
17774 | Definitions make our intuitions mathematically useful [Mayberry] |
17773 | Proof shows that it is true, but also why it must be true [Mayberry] |
14025 | The weaker version of Truthmaker: 'truth supervenes on being' [Crisp,TM] |
14023 | The Truthmaker thesis spells trouble for presentists [Crisp,TM] |
14024 | Truthmaker has problems with generalisation, non-existence claims, and property instantiations [Crisp,TM] |
17795 | Set theory can't be axiomatic, because it is needed to express the very notion of axiomatisation [Mayberry] |
17796 | There is a semi-categorical axiomatisation of set-theory [Mayberry] |
17800 | The misnamed Axiom of Infinity says the natural numbers are finite in size [Mayberry] |
17801 | The set hierarchy doesn't rely on the dubious notion of 'generating' them [Mayberry] |
17803 | Limitation of size is part of the very conception of a set [Mayberry] |
17786 | The mainstream of modern logic sees it as a branch of mathematics [Mayberry] |
17788 | First-order logic only has its main theorems because it is so weak [Mayberry] |
17791 | Only second-order logic can capture mathematical structure up to isomorphism [Mayberry] |
17787 | Big logic has one fixed domain, but standard logic has a domain for each interpretation [Mayberry] |
17790 | No Löwenheim-Skolem logic can axiomatise real analysis [Mayberry] |
17778 | Axiomatiation relies on isomorphic structures being essentially the same [Mayberry] |
17779 | 'Classificatory' axioms aim at revealing similarity in morphology of structures [Mayberry] |
17780 | 'Eliminatory' axioms get rid of traditional ideal and abstract objects [Mayberry] |
17789 | No logic which can axiomatise arithmetic can be compact or complete [Mayberry] |
17784 | Real numbers can be eliminated, by axiom systems for complete ordered fields [Mayberry] |
17781 | Real numbers were invented, as objects, to simplify and generalise 'quantity' [Mayberry] |
17782 | Greek quantities were concrete, and ratio and proportion were their science [Mayberry] |
17799 | Cantor's infinite is an absolute, of all the sets or all the ordinal numbers [Mayberry] |
17797 | Cantor extended the finite (rather than 'taming the infinite') [Mayberry] |
17775 | If proof and definition are central, then mathematics needs and possesses foundations [Mayberry] |
17776 | The ultimate principles and concepts of mathematics are presumed, or grasped directly [Mayberry] |
17777 | Foundations need concepts, definition rules, premises, and proof rules [Mayberry] |
17804 | Axiom theories can't give foundations for mathematics - that's using axioms to explain axioms [Mayberry] |
17792 | 1st-order PA is only interesting because of results which use 2nd-order PA [Mayberry] |
17793 | It is only 2nd-order isomorphism which suggested first-order PA completeness [Mayberry] |
17794 | Set theory is not just first-order ZF, because that is inadequate for mathematics [Mayberry] |
17802 | We don't translate mathematics into set theory, because it comes embodied in that way [Mayberry] |
17805 | Set theory is not just another axiomatised part of mathematics [Mayberry] |
17785 | Real numbers as abstracted objects are now treated as complete ordered fields [Mayberry] |
14021 | Worm Perdurantism has a fusion of all the parts; Stage Perdurantism has one part at a time [Crisp,TM] |
7876 | Even if we identify pain with neural events, we can't explain why those neurons cause that feeling [Levine, by Papineau] |
7877 | Only phenomenal states have an explanatory gap; water is fully explained by H2O [Levine, by Papineau] |
7878 | Materialism won't explain phenomenal properties, because the latter aren't seen in causal roles [Papineau on Levine] |
14020 | 'Eternalism' is the thesis that reality includes past, present and future entities [Crisp,TM] |
14026 | Presentists can talk of 'times', with no more commitment than modalists have to possible worlds [Crisp,TM] |
14022 | The only three theories are Presentism, Dynamic (A-series) Eternalism and Static (B-series) Eternalism [Crisp,TM] |