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Single Idea 10177

[filed under theme 6. Mathematics / B. Foundations for Mathematics / 7. Mathematical Structuralism / d. Platonist structuralism ]

Full Idea

Universalist Structuralism is eliminativist about abstract objects, in a distinctive form. Instead of treating the base element (say '1') as an ambiguous referring expression (the Relativist approach), it is a variable which is quantified out.

Gist of Idea

Universalist Structuralism eliminates the base element, as a variable, which is then quantified out

Source

E Reck / M Price (Structures and Structuralism in Phil of Maths [2000], §5)


A Reaction

I am a temperamental eliminativist on this front (and most others) so this is tempting. I am also in love with the concept of a 'variable', which I take to be utterly fundamental to all conceptual thought, even in animals, and not just a trick of algebra.


The 18 ideas from 'Structures and Structuralism in Phil of Maths'

ZFC set theory has only 'pure' sets, without 'urelements' [Reck/Price]
'Analysis' is the theory of the real numbers [Reck/Price]
Peano Arithmetic can have three second-order axioms, plus '1' and 'successor' [Reck/Price]
Structuralism emerged from abstract algebra, axioms, and set theory and its structures [Reck/Price]
Formalist Structuralism says the ontology is vacuous, or formal, or inference relations [Reck/Price]
Set-theory gives a unified and an explicit basis for mathematics [Reck/Price]
Mereological arithmetic needs infinite objects, and function definitions [Reck/Price]
Relativist Structuralism just stipulates one successful model as its arithmetic [Reck/Price]
The existence of an infinite set is assumed by Relativist Structuralism [Reck/Price]
A nominalist might avoid abstract objects by just appealing to mereological sums [Reck/Price]
While true-in-a-model seems relative, true-in-all-models seems not to be [Reck/Price]
Universalist Structuralism is based on generalised if-then claims, not one particular model [Reck/Price]
Universalist Structuralism eliminates the base element, as a variable, which is then quantified out [Reck/Price]
Three types of variable in second-order logic, for objects, functions, and predicates/sets [Reck/Price]
Maybe we should talk of an infinity of 'possible' objects, to avoid arithmetic being vacuous [Reck/Price]
There are 'particular' structures, and 'universal' structures (what the former have in common) [Reck/Price]
Pattern Structuralism studies what isomorphic arithmetic models have in common [Reck/Price]
There are Formalist, Relativist, Universalist and Pattern structuralism [Reck/Price]