"The activities carried out in the project can be divided in three main clusters. Their description also explains in what way the work carried out in the project differs from the original work packages.
1) The first part of the project, months 1-6, focused on two main issues. The first was the development of new theories of truth and necessity (in two forms, as metaphysical necessity and as logical necessity), compatible with self-reference, and overcoming the Liar and Montague's paradox. The second was an abstract approach to the possibility of comparing axioms for semantic and modal notions.
2) The second part of the project, months 6-12, focused on the criteria for choosing a specific solution to modal and semantic paradoxes, e.g. whether one should be prepared to revise the principles of standard logic as a reaction to paradox. The theory-choice criterion proposed and defended in the project was based on the presence of a satisfactory amount of non-semantic, non-modal consequences. This proposal has been corroborated by new results in the proof theory of semantic and modal theories.
3) The third part of the project, months 12-19, focused on the notion of implicit commitment for basic formal theories: what principles is one bound to accept if she accepts a starting theory? The analysis put forward in the process identified a coherent path from basic combinatorial assumtions (e.g. basic arithmetical theories), and much stronger logical systems, based on the combination of semantic or modal axioms and the so-called ""reflection principles"", i.e. explicit logical assertions of the correctness of a starting theory."