HUME’S PRINCIPLE, BAD COMPANY, AND THE AXIOM OF CHOICE
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Published:2022-04-08
Issue:
Volume:
Page:1-19
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ISSN:1755-0203
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Container-title:The Review of Symbolic Logic
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language:en
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Short-container-title:The Review of Symbolic Logic
Author:
ROBERTS SAM,SHAPIRO STEWART
Abstract
Abstract
One prominent criticism of the abstractionist program is the so-called Bad Company objection. The complaint is that abstraction principles cannot in general be a legitimate way to introduce mathematical theories, since some of them are inconsistent. The most notorious example, of course, is Frege’s Basic Law V. A common response to the objection suggests that an abstraction principle can be used to legitimately introduce a mathematical theory precisely when it is stable: when it can be made true on all sufficiently large domains. In this paper, we raise a worry for this response to the Bad Company objection. We argue, perhaps surprisingly, that it requires very strong assumptions about the range of the second-order quantifiers; assumptions that the abstractionist should reject.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Logic,Philosophy,Mathematics (miscellaneous)
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