This is a question about a comment in a recent publication by Roman Kossak. Kossak wrote:
"Nonstandardness in set theory has a different nature. In arithmetic, there is one intended object of study - the standard model. There is no intended model in set theory. Set-theorists talk about universes of sets, but what happens in those universes very much depends on the axioms that they satisfy, and there are many axiomatic systems to choose from. There is no standard model of set theory, but still there is a notion of nonstandardness."
The point seems to be as follows. First, the purported base model $\mathbb N$ seems to please everybody, and therefore deserves the name "the standard model". Meanwhile, the corresponding model of $\mathbb R$ given by Goedel's computable reals does not please everybody because $V=L$ leads to consequences that are considered too strong. The point is not so much models of ZFC as models of $\mathcal P(\mathbb N)$ namely $\mathbb R$, where there is already a dispute with regard to the "minimal model". For example, if $V=L$ then $\mathcal P(\mathbb N)$ will satisfy CH, but other models will not.
Alice could argue regarding $\mathbb N$ that it has the special property that, under any ZFC-like foundational system, $\mathbb N$ is the least model of the Peano axioms. Bob would respond that Goedel's constructible reals are the least model of $\mathbb R$ in a similar sense to $\mathbb N$ being the minimal model of PA.
Alice could argue that $\mathbb N$ is routinely identified with a rather subtle thing that we may call the physical model of PA (counting pebbles, etc.) and practical computation.
Bob would ask, as far as counting pebbles and practical computation are concerned, $\mathbb N$ is "routinely identified" by whom exactly? It is perhaps the metalanguage integers that can be related to pebble-counting etc. However, the metalanguage integers form a sorites-like subcollection that cannot be assumed to satisfy PA (of course it would be different for formal computation). The point was argued in detail in a 2017 publication in Real Analysis Exchange https://u.cs.biu.ac.il/~katzmik/infinitesimals.html#17f Furthermore, where would one look for a "physical model of PA" ?
Alice could argue that positing a minimal $\mathbb N$ appeals to the broader mathematical public.
Bob would retort that Platonist notions may be appealing to such a public, but are they are justified?
Alice could argue that, by Goedel, ZFC does not prove the consistency of any model of ZFC; thus to get a model of ZFC, we would need to argue in a suitable stronger theory.
Bob would counter by noting that Goedel incompleteness applies to models of PA, as well.
Alice could argue that identifying a model $M$ of ZFC with any assemblage of things bearing any form of physical existence is well beyond any human vision of the world of things.
Bob would retort that, while $M$ is beyond any form of physical existence, both $\mathbb N$ and $\mathbb R$ are embedded in such an $M$, so it may be hard to argue for a difference between $\mathbb N$ and $\mathbb R$ based on the nature of $M$. While it seems incontestable that such an $M$ can't be endowed with "any form of physical existence", couldn't one argue the same for $\mathbb N$ and $\mathbb R$?
Such an analysis tends to confirm the following conclusions reached by Rittberg:
(1) the metaphysical views of mathematicians can shape what counts as relevant research; (2) mathematical results can shape the metaphysical beliefs of mathematicians; (3) metaphysical thought and mathematical activity develop in tandem in mathematical practices.
In conclusion, one could formulate the following query concerning Kossak's view on the difference between standard models for $\mathbb N$ and $\mathbb R$. Some people also find the so-called standard $\mathbb N$ displeasing, because it does not reflect the historical record of mathematicians from Leibniz to Cauchy who worked with infinite (in technical modern terminology, unlimited) integers. From this point of view, Edward Nelson's $\mathbb N$ (incorporating a distinction between standard and nonstandard integer, the latter being unlimited) would be more satisfying.
Could one then argue that there is little difference between $\mathbb N$ and $\mathbb R$ on account of the question of the existence of a standard/intended model?
Note. In response to a comment below the question to the effect that "standard means that the model is well-founded", note that Nelson's $\mathbb N$ (incorporating the standard/nonstandard distinction, as mentioned above) is well-founded in precisely the same technical sense as in ZFC. Another comment claimed that Kossak "is just making a sociological observation. People agree that the minimal model of first-order PA deserves to be called the standard model of the natural numbers". My question concerns the meaning the definite article before "standard model", as per above.