more on this theme     |     more from this thinker


Single Idea 9891

[filed under theme 9. Objects / B. Unity of Objects / 3. Unity Problems / e. Vague objects ]

Full Idea

The first demand of logic is of a sharp boundary.

Gist of Idea

The first demand of logic is of a sharp boundary

Source

Gottlob Frege (Grundgesetze der Arithmetik 2 (Basic Laws) [1903], §160), quoted by Michael Dummett - Frege philosophy of mathematics Ch.22

Book Ref

Dummett,Michael: 'Frege: philosophy of mathematics' [Duckworth 1991], p.277


A Reaction

Nothing I have read about vagueness has made me doubt Frege's view of this, although precisification might allow you to do logic with vague concepts without having to finally settle where the actual boundaries are.


The 12 ideas from 'Grundgesetze der Arithmetik 2 (Basic Laws)'

Later Frege held that definitions must fix a function's value for every possible argument [Frege, by Wright,C]
Real numbers are ratios of quantities [Frege, by Dummett]
A number is a class of classes of the same cardinality [Frege, by Dummett]
Frege's biggest error is in not accounting for the senses of number terms [Hodes on Frege]
Cardinals say how many, and reals give measurements compared to a unit quantity [Frege]
The modern account of real numbers detaches a ratio from its geometrical origins [Frege]
The first demand of logic is of a sharp boundary [Frege]
Only what is logically complex can be defined; what is simple must be pointed to [Frege]
We can't define a word by defining an expression containing it, as the remaining parts are a problem [Frege]
Formalism misunderstands applications, metatheory, and infinity [Frege, by Dummett]
Only applicability raises arithmetic from a game to a science [Frege]
If we abstract the difference between two houses, they don't become the same house [Frege]