The insubstantiality of mathematical objects as positions in structures

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Abstract

The realist versions of mathematical structuralism are often characterized by what I call ‘the insubstantiality thesis’, according to which mathematical objects, being positions in structures, have no non-structural properties: they are purely structural objects. The thesis has been criticized for being inconsistent or descriptively inadequate. In this paper, by implementing the resources of a real-definitional account of essence in the context of Fregean abstraction principles, I offer a version of structuralism–essentialist structuralism–which validates a weaker version of the insubstantiality thesis: mathematical objects have no non-structural essential properties. Next, I show how this rendition of structuralism alleviates a Fregean worry against insubstantiality, which is directed at the explanation of the applicability of mathematics from the structuralist perspective.

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Assadian, B. (2022). The insubstantiality of mathematical objects as positions in structures. Inquiry (United Kingdom). https://doi.org/10.1080/0020174X.2021.1990120

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