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Subject: Philosophy  Book Title: Deflating Existential Consequence
Deflating Existential Consequence
A Case for Nominalism
Azzouni, Jody Professor of Philosophy, Tufts University
Print publication date: 2004
Published to Oxford Scholarship Online: January 2005
Print ISBN-13: 978-0-19-515988-2
doi:10.1093/0195159888.001.0001
 
Abstract: What in our theoretical pronouncements commits us to objects? The Quinean standard for ontological commitment involves (nearly enough) commitments when we utter “there is” or “there are” statements without hope of eliminating these by paraphrase. Coupled with the indispensability of the truth of applied mathematical doctrine, the result is that the ontologically hard-nosed scientist is a Platonist—haplessly commited to abstracta. In this book Azzouni offers a way around the Quinean straitjacket: ontological commitment turns on how theories are (nearly enough) nailed to the world. The specifics of how theories are applied indicates which among the posits of a theory are mere mathematical garb and which are genuine connections to items out there. In the first part of the book Azzouni undercuts the arguments, both actual and possible, in support of Quine’s criterion. An alternative criterion for what exists—ontological independence—is offered, one in sturdy accord with ordinary folk views on the matter. In the second part of the book, a beginning is made of bringing this alternative to bear upon scientific theories with a rich mathematical component. Along the way, old philosophical issues about absolute space and time versus relative space and time, the status of mathematical posits, such as spatial and temporal points, and so on, are illuminated.

Keywords: application of mathematics, criterion for what exists, existence, indispensability, ontological commitment, ontological independence, physics, Platonism, Quine, truth
Table of Contents
Introduction
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1. Why Empirically Indispensable Mathematical Doctrine and (Some) Scientific Law Must Be Taken as True: Preliminary Considerations
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2. Circumventing Commitment to Truth despite Empirical Indispensability
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3. Criteria for the Ontological Commitments of Discourse
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4. Criteria for What Exists
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5. Ontological Commitment and the Vernacular: Some Warnings
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6. Posits and the Epistemic Burdens They Bear
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7. Posits and Existence
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8. Applying Mathematics: Two Models
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9. Applied Mathematics and Ontology
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Conclusion
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Bibliography
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Index
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doi:10.1093/0195159888.001.0001
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I TRUTH AND ONTOLOGY
II APPLIED MATHEMATICS AND ITS POSITS