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  1. Realism in mathematics.Penelope Maddy - 1990 - New York: Oxford University Prress.
    Mathematicians tend to think of themselves as scientists investigating the features of real mathematical things, and the wildly successful application of mathematics in the physical sciences reinforces this picture of mathematics as an objective study. For philosophers, however, this realism about mathematics raises serious questions: What are mathematical things? Where are they? How do we know about them? Offering a scrupulously fair treatment of both mathematical and philosophical concerns, Penelope Maddy here delineates and defends a novel version of mathematical realism. (...)
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  • All Uncountable Cardinals Can be Singular.M. Gitik - 1984 - Journal of Symbolic Logic 49 (2):662-663.
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  • A First Glance at Non-Restrictiveness.Benedikt Löwe - 2001 - Philosophia Mathematica 9 (3):347-354.
    Maddy's notion of restrictiveness has many problematic aspects, one of them being that it is almost impossible to show that a theory is not restrictive. In this note the author addresses a crucial question of Martin Goldstern (Vienna) and points to some directions of future research.
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  • Normal mathematics will need new axioms.Harvey Friedman - 2000 - Bulletin of Symbolic Logic 6 (4):434-446.
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