Description (podcaster-provided):
Mathematical Philosophy - the application of logical and mathematical methods in philosophy - is about to experience a tremendous boom in various areas of philosophy. At the new Munich Center for Mathematical Philosophy, which is funded mostly by the German Alexander von Humboldt Foundation, philosophical research will be carried out mathematically, that is, by means of methods that are very close to those used by the scientists.Themes and summary (AI-generated based on podcaster-provided show and episode descriptions):
➤ mathematical metaphysics and philosophy of language • formal semantics: compositionality, opacity, quotation, conditionals • logic and metaphysical presuppositions • structuralism/structural realism, inter-theoretical relations • modality, laws, measurement realism • truth relativism • ontology: nonexistents, disease classification • rational arguments about GodThis podcast presents research talks and discussions from the Munich Center for Mathematical Philosophy, focusing on the use of formal tools—logic, mathematics, and model-building—to clarify and argue for substantive philosophical claims. Across the episodes, speakers examine core questions in metaphysics and the philosophy of language while paying close attention to how formal semantics and logical theory shape what can be said, inferred, or ontologically committed to.
A recurring theme is the relationship between abstract structures and the world: debates in the philosophy of mathematics about structuralism and metaphysical dependence; questions about whether logic itself carries implicit metaphysical commitments; and competing forms of realism, including structural realism and varieties of realism connected to scientific theorizing, measurement, and quantitative magnitudes. Several contributions explore modality and laws of nature, including dispositional accounts of possibility and metaphysical issues raised by different formulations of fundamental physical principles.
Another central strand concerns meaning and compositionality in natural language. The episodes address opacity and transparency, including Fregean themes (sense/reference, extensional versus intensional composition), the handling of iterated opacity, and whether apparently problematic phenomena like quotation can receive a systematic compositional treatment. Related work connects linguistic semantics to logical consequence, using detailed semantic analysis to assess purported counterexamples to familiar inference patterns involving conditionals.
The podcast also extends these formal and metaphysical approaches to applied and interdisciplinary topics, such as the metaphysics and classification of diseases, and to broader philosophical disputes where arguments are assessed for their rational structure, including debates about the existence of God.