How do we account for the truth of arithmetic? And if it does not depend for its truth on the way the world is, what constrains the world to conform to... > Lire la suite
Plus d'un million de livres disponibles
Retrait gratuit en magasin
Livraison à domicile sous 24h/48h* * si livre disponible en stock, livraison payante
37,20 €
Expédié sous 8 à 17 jours
ou
À retirer gratuitement en magasin U entre le 2 décembre et le 11 décembre
How do we account for the truth of arithmetic? And if it does not depend for its truth on the way the world is, what constrains the world to conform to arithmetic? Reason 's Nearest Kin is a critical examination of the astonishing progress made towards answering these questions from the late nineteenth to the mid-twentieth century. In the space of fifty years Frege, Dedekind, Russell, Wittgenstein, Ramsey; Hilbert, and Carnap developed accounts of the content of arithmetic that were brilliantly original both technically and philosophically. Michael Potters innovative study presents them all as finding that content in various aspects of the complex linkage between experience, language, thought, and the world. Potters reading places them all in Kant's shadow, since it was his attempt to ground arithmetic in the spatio-temporal structure of reality that they were reacting against; but it places us in Gödel's shadow, since his incompleteness theorems supply us with a measure of the richness of the content they were trying to explain. This stimulating reassessment of some of the classic texts in the philosophy of mathematics reveals many unexpected connections and illuminating comparisons, and offers a wealth of ideas for future work in the subject.
Michael Potter is a University Lecturer in Philosophy at Cambridge and a Fellow of Fitzwilliam College, where he was previously Director of Studies in Mathematics.
Reason'S Nearest Kin. Philosophies Of Arithmetic From Kant To Carnap est également présent dans les rayons