Philosophy and Model Theory Tim Button – Ebook Instant Download/Delivery ISBN(s): 9780198790396,0198790392, 9780192507624, 0192507621
Product details:
- ISBN 10: 0192507621
- ISBN 13: 9780192507624
- Author: Tim Button
Model theory is used in every theoretical branch of analytic philosophy: in philosophy of mathematics, in philosophy of science, in philosophy of language, in philosophical logic, and in metaphysics. But these wide-ranging uses of model theory have created a highly fragmented literature. On the one hand, many philosophically significant results are found only in mathematics textbooks: these are aimed squarely at mathematicians; they typically presuppose that the reader has a serious background in mathematics; and little clue is given as to their philosophical significance. On the other hand, the philosophical applications of these results are scattered across disconnected pockets of papers. The first aim of this book, then, is to explore the philosophical uses of model theory, focusing on the central topics of reference, realism, and doxology. Its second aim is to address important questions in the philosophy of model theory, such as: sameness of theories and structure, the boundaries of logic, and the classification of mathematical structures. Philosophy and Model Theory will be accessible to anyone who has completed an introductory logic course. It does not assume that readers have encountered model theory before, but starts right at the beginning, discussing philosophical issues that arise even with conceptually basic model theory. Moreover, the book is largely self-contained: model-theoretic notions are defined as and when they are needed for the philosophical discussion, and many of the most philosophically significant results are given accessible proofs.
Table contents:
1: Logics and languages
2: Permutations and referential indeterminacy
3: Ramsey sentences and Newman’s objection
4: Compactness, infinitesimals, and the reals
5: Sameness of structure and theory
6: Modelism and mathematical doxology
7: Categoricity and the natural numbers
8: Categoricity and the sets
9: Transcendental arguments against model-theoretical scepticism
10: Internal categoricity and the natural numbers
11: Internal categoricity and the sets
12: Internal categoricity and truth
13: Boolean-valued structures
14: Types and Stone spaces
15: Indiscernibility
16: Quantifiers
17: Classification and uncountable categoricity
18: Wilfrid Hodges: A short history of model theory
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