Tim Button is a Senior Lecturer, and a Fellow of St John's College, at the University of Cambridge. His first book, The Limits of Realism (OUP 2013) explores the relationship between words and world; between semantics and scepticism. His main research interests lie in meta(meta)physics, logic, mathematics, and language. In 2014 he received a Philip Leverhulme Prize. Sean Walsh did his graduate work in philosophy and mathematics at the University of Notre Dame, where he received a PhD in Logic and the Foundations of Mathematics. He is an Associate Professor in the Department of Philosophy at the University of California, Los Angeles.
A: Reference and realism
1: Logics and languages
2: Permutations and referential indeterminacy
3: Ramsey sentences and Newman's objection
4: Compactness, infinitesimals, and the reals
5: Sameness of structure and theory
B: Categoricity
6: Modelism and mathematical doxology
7: Categoricity and the natural numbers
8: Categoricity and the sets
9: Transcendental arguments
10: Internal categoricity and the natural numbers
11: Internal categoricity and the sets
12: Internal categoricity and truth
13: Boolean-valued structures
C: Indiscernibility and classification
14: Types and Stone spaces
15: Indiscernibility
16: Quantifiers
17: Classification and uncountable categoricity
D: Historical appendix
A short history of model theory