Restriction by noncontraction
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2016
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Duke University Press
Citation
Zardini, E. (2016) «Restriction by noncontraction», en Notre Dame Journal of Formal Logic. Duke University Press, 57(2), pp. 287-327. Disponible en: https://doi.org/10.1215/00294527-3429057.
Abstract
This paper investigates how naive theories of truth fare with respect to a set of extremely plausible principles of restricted quantification. It is first shown that both nonsubstructural theories as well as certain substructural theories cannot validate all those principles. Then, pursuing further an approach to the semantic paradoxes that the author has defended elsewhere, the theory of restricted quantification available in a specific naive theory that rejects the structural property of contraction is explored. It is shown that the theory validates all the principles in question, and it is argued that other prima facie plausible principles that the theory fails to validate are objectionable on independent grounds.
Description
At different stages during the writing of the paper, I have benefited from a Postdoctoral Research Fellowship of the National Autonomous University of Mexico (UNAM), from a Postdoctoral Research Fellowship of the Arts and Humanities Research Council (AHRC), from the Marie Curie Intra-European Research Fellowship 301493 on A Non-Contractive Theory of Naive Semantic Properties: Logical Developments and Metaphysical Foundations (NTNSP), and
from the Research Fellowship IF/01202/2013 of the Foundation for Science and Technology (FCT) on Tolerance and Instability: The Substructure of Cognitions, Transitions and Collections (TI), as well as from partial funds from the project CONSOLIDERINGENIO 2010 CSD2009-00056 of the Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation on Philosophy of Perspectival Thoughts and Facts (PERSP), from the Marie Curie Initial Training Network 238128 on Perspectival Thoughts and Facts (PETAF).
Received: 1 September 2012 ; Accepted: 14 October 2013; Published: 2016.
First available in Project Euclid: 28 January 2016.











