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  1. Extensionalizing Intensional Second-Order Logic.Jonathan Payne - 2015 - Notre Dame Journal of Formal Logic 56 (1):243-261.
    Neo-Fregean approaches to set theory, following Frege, have it that sets are the extensions of concepts, where concepts are the values of second-order variables. The idea is that, given a second-order entity $X$, there may be an object $\varepsilon X$, which is the extension of X. Other writers have also claimed a similar relationship between second-order logic and set theory, where sets arise from pluralities. This paper considers two interpretations of second-order logic—as being either extensional or intensional—and whether either is (...)
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  • Putnam and Truth.Nilanjan Bhowmick - 2022 - Journal of the Indian Council of Philosophical Research 39 (3):223-235.
    When Putnam wrote Reason, Truth and History, he thought that whatever the truth was, it could not entirely outrun justification. He moved away from this epistemic conception of truth—of truth as idealized rational acceptability—and his later view appears to recognize the fact that there are truths that may well be recognition transcendent. Wright (J Philos 97(6):335–364, 2000) has correctly observed that this change in Putnam’s views raises the question of how his current natural realism is different from metaphysical realism, a (...)
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  • Rational Acceptability and Truth.Mikiko Yokoyama - 2020 - Annals of the Japan Association for Philosophy of Science 29:27-39.
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  • Between Dolev and Dummett: Some comments on 'antirealism, presentism and bivalence'.Hilary Putnam - 2010 - International Journal of Philosophical Studies 18 (1):91 – 96.
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