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Hartry Field

    Harry Field is a philosopher specializing in metaphysics, the philosophy of mathematics, logic, and science. His work delves into objectivity, indeterminacy, a priori knowledge, causation, and semantic and set-theoretic paradoxes. His writings explore profound questions about the nature of reality and our grasp of it. Field is recognized for his incisive examination of the fundamental principles of thought and existence.

    Truth And The Absence Of Fact
    Saving Truth From Paradox
    Science without Numbers
    • 2016

      Science without Numbers

      • 176 pages
      • 7 hours of reading
      4.5(10)Add rating

      Science Without Numbers caused a stir in philosophy on its original publication in 1980, with its bold nominalist approach to the ontology of mathematics and science. Hartry Field argues that we can explain the utility of mathematics without assuming it true. Part of the argument is that goodmathematics has a special feature ("conservativeness") that allows it to be applied to "nominalistic" claims (roughly, those neutral to the existence of mathematical entities) in a way that generates nominalistic consequences more easily without generating any new ones. Field goes on to argue thatwe can axiomatize physical theories using nominalistic claims only, and that in fact this has advantages over the usual axiomatizations that are independent of nominalism. There has been much debate about the book since it first appeared. It is now reissued in a revised contains a substantial newpreface giving the author's current views on the original book and the issues that were raised in the subsequent discussion of it.

      Science without Numbers
    • 2008

      Saving Truth From Paradox

      • 406 pages
      • 15 hours of reading
      4.3(10)Add rating

      This is an ambitious investigation into paradoxes of truth and related issues, with occasional forays into notions such as vagueness, the nature of validity, and the Goedel incompleteness theorems. Hartry Field presents a new approach to the paradoxes and provides a systematic and detailed account of the main competing approaches.

      Saving Truth From Paradox
    • 2001

      Truth And The Absence Of Fact

      • 424 pages
      • 15 hours of reading

      Presenting a selection of thirteen essays on various topics at the foundations of philosophy--one previously unpublished and eight accompanied by substantial new postscripts--this book offers outstanding insight on truth, meaning, and propositional attitudes; semantic indeterminacy and other kinds of "factual defectiveness;" and issues concerning objectivity, especially in mathematics and in epistemology. It will reward the attention of any philosopher interested in language, epistemology, or mathematics.

      Truth And The Absence Of Fact