Rudolf Carnap defends the realist view of abstract objects in his Empiricism, Semantics, and Ontology. — quine
Platonism is often understood as realist view of abstract objects in contemporary sense. Rudolf Carnap defends the realist view of abstract objects in his Empiricism, Semantics, and Ontology. — quine
On what grounds does he do this without evoking metaphysics? Did anyone ever get around to doing that? I know Russel and Whitehead tried really hard, yet Godel disproved them in one blow, well actually two blows. — Question
Carnap states that the decision between realism and instrumentalism should be discussed in the form (1974, p. 256): “Shall we prefer a language of physics (and of science in general) that contains theoretical terms, or a language without such terms?” Carnap’s preference, as very clearly stated in the reply to Hempel, is to adopt the former alternative, and so his choice, as he now understands the issue, is to adopt precisely the language of realism.
Does this mean that Carnap is now committed to a realist epistemology and metaphysics (of the kind defended by Psillos, for example), which aims to “explain” the success of science by appealing to pre-existing objective natural kinds in the world, a theory of “factual reference” linking theoretical terms to such objective natural kinds, and an epistemological defense of the “no miracles” argument against the “pessimistic meta-induction”? Not at all. Carnap’s whole point is to replace the question “are theoretical entities real?” with the question which form of language we should prefer—and prefer for purely pragmatic or practical rather than theoretical reasons.
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