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===By Russell=== [[Bertrand Russell]] held that propositions were structured entities with objects and properties as constituents. One important difference between [[Ludwig Wittgenstein]]'s view (according to which a proposition is the set of [[possible world]]s/states of affairs in which it is true) is that on the Russellian account, two propositions that are true in all the same states of affairs can still be differentiated. For instance, the proposition "two plus two equals four" is distinct on a Russellian account from the proposition "three plus three equals six". If propositions are sets of possible worlds, however, then all mathematical truths (and all other necessary truths) are the same set (the set of all possible worlds).{{citation needed|date=November 2014}}
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