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Single Idea 10751

[from 'First-order Logic, 2nd-order, Completeness' by Marcus Rossberg, in 5. Theory of Logic / A. Overview of Logic / 7. Second-Order Logic ]

Full Idea

Second-order logic raises doubts because of its ontological commitment to the set-theoretic hierarchy, and the allegedly problematic epistemic status of the second-order consequence relation.

Gist of Idea

Second-order logic needs the sets, and its consequence has epistemological problems

Source

Marcus Rossberg (First-order Logic, 2nd-order, Completeness [2004], §1)


A Reaction

The 'epistemic' problem is whether you can know the truths, given that the logic is incomplete, and so they cannot all be proved. Rossberg defends second-order logic against the second problem. A third problem is that it may be mathematics.