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ARTICLES

Naturalism and Abstract Entities

Pages 129-146 | Published online: 24 Jun 2010
 

Abstract

I argue that the most popular versions of naturalism imply nominalism in philosophy of mathematics. In particular, there is a conflict in Quine’s philosophy between naturalism and realism in mathematics. The argument starts from a consequence of naturalism on the nature of human cognitive subjects, physicalism about cognitive subjects, and concludes that this implies a version of nominalism, which I will carefully characterize. The indispensability of classical mathematics for the sciences and semantic/confirmation holism does not affect the argument. The disquotational theory of reference and truth is discussed but rejected. This argument differs from the Benacerrafian arguments against realism, because it does not rely on any specific assumption about the nature of knowledge or reference. It differs from the popular objections to the indispensability argument for realism as well, because it can admit both indispensability and holism. This argument motivates a new, radically naturalistic and nominalistic approach to philosophy of mathematics.

Acknowledgements

The research for this article is supported by Chinese National Social Science Foundation (grant number 05BZX049). I would like to thank several anonymous referees and the editor of this journal. Their comments and suggestions helped to improve this article greatly.

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