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(1987) Synthese 71 (1).

A model-theoretic criterion of ontology

John Bacon

pp. 1-18

My aim has been to adapt Quine's criterion of the ontological commitment of theories couched in standard quantificational idiom to a much broader class of theories by focusing on the set-theoretic structure of the models of those theories. For standard first-order theories, the two criteria coincide on simple entities. Divergences appear as they are applied to higher-order theories and as composite entities are taken into account. In support of the extended criterion, I appeal to its fruits in treating the various examples considered above and to the healthy intuitions of the non-noneists among us. Don't O(m) and E(m) comprise just the things we should have though existed according to a particular interpretation m of a language or a theory? Whatever the answer (and it will hardly be unanimous), I hope to have pointed the way towards a recognition of ontology as a worthwhile branch of modern theory.

Publication details

DOI: 10.1007/BF00486433

Full citation:

Bacon, J. (1987). A model-theoretic criterion of ontology. Synthese 71 (1), pp. 1-18.

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