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Publisher Summary 1
If we must take mathematical statements to be true, must we also believe in the existence of abstractaeternal invisible mathematical objects accessible only by the power of pure thought? Jody Azzouni says no, and he claims that the way to escape such commitments is to accept (as an essential part of scientific doctrine) true statements which are about objects that don't exist in any sense at all.
Azzouni illustrates what the metaphysical landscape looks like once we avoid a militant Realism which forces our commitment to anything that our theories quantify. Escaping metaphysical straitjackets (such as the correspondence theory of truth), while retaining the insight that sometruths are about objects that doexist, Azzouni says that we can sort scientifically-given objects into two categories: ones which exist, and to which we forge instrumental access in order to learn their properties, and ones which do not, that is, which are made up in exactly the same sense that fictional objects are. He offers as a case study a small portion of Newtonian physics, and one result of his classification of its ontological commitments, is that it does not commit us to absolute space and time.
目录
Acknowledgments 6
Contents 8
Introduction 12
Part I. Truth and Ontology 22
1 Why Empirically Indispensable Mathematical Doctrine and (Some) Scientific Law Must Be Taken as True: Preliminary Considerations 24
2 Circumventing Commitment to Truth despite Empirical Indispensability 38
3 Criteria for the Ontological Commitments of Discourse 58
4 Criteria for What Exists 90
5 Ontological Commitment and the Vernacular: Some Warnings 123
Part II. Applied Mathematics and Its Posits 132
6 Posits and the Epistemic Burdens They Bear 134
7 Posits and Existence 152
8 Applying Mathematics: Two Models 169
9 Applied Mathematics and Ontology 190
Conclusion 231
References 236
Index 244
A 244
B 244
C 244
D 245
E 245
F 245
G 246
H 246
I 246
J 246
K 246
L 246
M 246
N 247
O 247
P 247
Q 248
R 248
S 249
T 249
U 250
V 250
W 250
Y 250
Z 250
Contents 8
Introduction 12
Part I. Truth and Ontology 22
1 Why Empirically Indispensable Mathematical Doctrine and (Some) Scientific Law Must Be Taken as True: Preliminary Considerations 24
2 Circumventing Commitment to Truth despite Empirical Indispensability 38
3 Criteria for the Ontological Commitments of Discourse 58
4 Criteria for What Exists 90
5 Ontological Commitment and the Vernacular: Some Warnings 123
Part II. Applied Mathematics and Its Posits 132
6 Posits and the Epistemic Burdens They Bear 134
7 Posits and Existence 152
8 Applying Mathematics: Two Models 169
9 Applied Mathematics and Ontology 190
Conclusion 231
References 236
Index 244
A 244
B 244
C 244
D 245
E 245
F 245
G 246
H 246
I 246
J 246
K 246
L 246
M 246
N 247
O 247
P 247
Q 248
R 248
S 249
T 249
U 250
V 250
W 250
Y 250
Z 250
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