Do numbers, sets, and so forth, exist? What do
mathematical statements mean? Are they literally true or
false, or do they lack truth values altogether?
Addressing questions that have attracted lively debate
in recent years, Stewart Shapiro contends that standard
realist and antirealist accounts of mathematics are both
problematic.
As Benacerraf first noted, we are
confronted with the following powerful dilemma. The
desired continuity between mathematical and, say,
scientific language suggests realism, but realism in
this context suggests seemingly intractable epistemic
problems. As a way out of this dilemma, Shapiro
articulates a structuralist approach. On this view, the
subject matter of arithmetic, for example, is not a
fixed domain of numbers independent of each other, but
rather is the natural number structure, the pattern
common to any system of objects that has an initial
object and successor relation satisfying the induction
principle. Using this framework, realism in mathematics
can be preserved without troublesome epistemic
consequences.
Shapiro concludes by showing how a
structuralist approach can be applied to wider
philosophical questions such as the nature of an
"object" and the Quinean nature of ontological
commitment. Clear, compelling, and tautly argued,
Shapiro's work, noteworthy both in its attempt to
develop a full-length structuralist approach to
mathematics and to trace its emergence in the history of
mathematics, will be of deep interest to both
philosophers and mathematicians.
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