[FOM] Foreman's preface to HST
Roger Bishop Jones
rbj at rbjones.com
Sun May 2 02:13:38 EDT 2010
On Saturday 01 May 2010 06:02, Monroe Eskew wrote:
> On Thu, Apr 29, 2010 at 10:16 PM, Roger Bishop Jones
<rbj at rbjones.com> wrote:
> > And how does that differ from doing second order set
> > theory?
> If you say the main advantage of second order set theory
> is its semantic definiteness and thus "settling" some
> questions, then I'm saying you can still view those as
> "settled" in the same sense by simply saying they are
> settled by what a "standard model" says of them. (Or if
> you are bold enough, or realist enough, just whether
> they are true.) And then you proceed with first order
> set theory and all of its great methods and results.
My only reason for mentioning second order logic in this
context was (I am repeating myself here, tying to be more
explicit), that the phrase "standard model of ZFC" does not
have a definite accepted meaning which corresponds to "model
of second order ZFC" and the latter phrase is therefore
less likely to be misunderstood.
I would be delighted if there were a general recognition
that the idea of a "standard model" of ZFC is important and
that unsolved questions such as CH should be interpreted in
that context rather than supposed to be lacking a truth
value, (or worse, supposed to have a truth value without any
semantic clarification).
Roger Jones
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