Abstract

This book offers a foundation for mathematics grounded in a collection of axioms for logical possibility in a first-order language. The offered foundation is argued to have various epistemological benefits, in particular as regards our justification for believing certain axioms of set theory, and more generally as regards the ‘access’ problem for mathematical objects. The foundation for mathematics is provided in stages. First, Berry argues for a ‘potentialist’ interpretation of standard ZF set theory in terms of some axioms for logical possibility that are argued to ‘seem clearly true’. Then, she argues for a Carnap-inspired account of the semantics of ordinary mathematical language in support of the idea that all mathematical discourse as usually pursued can be interpreted faithfully in terms of the foundation provided by her potentialist set theory. The end result, it is argued, is something approximating a logicist foundation for mathematics: standard mathematical truths are interpreted in terms of a pure logic of logical possibility.

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