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This monograph addresses the question of the increasing irrelevance
of philosophy, which has seen scientists as well as philosophers
concluding that philosophy is dead and has dissolved into the
sciences. It seeks to answer the question of whether or not
philosophy can still be fruitful and what kind of philosophy can be
such. The author argues that from its very beginning philosophy has
focused on knowledge and methods for acquiring knowledge. This
view, however, has generally been abandoned in the last century
with the belief that, unlike the sciences, philosophy makes no
observations or experiments and requires only thought. Thus, in
order for philosophy to once again be relevant, it needs to return
to its roots and focus on knowledge as well as methods for
acquiring knowledge. Accordingly, this book deals with several
questions about knowledge that are essential to this view of
philosophy, including mathematical knowledge. Coverage examines
such issues as the nature of knowledge; plausibility and common
sense; knowledge as problem solving; modeling scientific knowledge;
mathematical objects, definitions, diagrams; mathematics and
reality; and more. This monograph presents a new approach to
philosophy, epistemology, and the philosophy of mathematics. It
will appeal to graduate students and researchers with interests in
the role of knowledge, the analytic method, models of science, and
mathematics and reality.
This book offers an alternative to current philosophy of
mathematics: heuristic philosophy of mathematics. In accordance
with the heuristic approach, the philosophy of mathematics must
concern itself with the making of mathematics and in particular
with mathematical discovery. In the past century, mainstream
philosophy of mathematics has claimed that the philosophy of
mathematics cannot concern itself with the making of mathematics
but only with finished mathematics, namely mathematics as presented
in published works. On this basis, mainstream philosophy of
mathematics has maintained that mathematics is theorem proving by
the axiomatic method. This view has turned out to be untenable
because of Goedel's incompleteness theorems, which have shown that
the view that mathematics is theorem proving by the axiomatic
method does not account for a large number of basic features of
mathematics. By using the heuristic approach, this book argues that
mathematics is not theorem proving by the axiomatic method, but is
rather problem solving by the analytic method. The author argues
that this view can account for the main items of the mathematical
process, those being: mathematical objects, demonstrations,
definitions, diagrams, notations, explanations, applicability,
beauty, and the role of mathematical knowledge.
This book presents Goedel's incompleteness theorems and the other
limitative results which are most significant for the philosophy of
mathematics. Results are stated in the form most relevant for use
in the philosophy of mathematics. An appendix considers their
implications for Hilbert's Program for the foundations of
mathematics. The text is self-contained, all notions being
explained in full detail, but of course previous exposure to the
very first rudiments of mathematical logic will help.
Questo libro nasce dall'idea di riprendere i nostri testi preparati
per un corso di perfezionamento organizzato nel 1998
dall'Universita di Roma Tor Vergata. L'idea, a sua volta, nasce
dalla richiesta degli studenti dei nostri corsi di disporre di un
primo strumento per orientarsi nella storia della logica in un arco
di tempo molto vasto. Proprio per questo, il libro non ha pretese
di completezza e si limita a esaminare alcuni autori e alcuni
argomenti cruciali nel periodo considerato.
This monograph addresses the question of the increasing irrelevance
of philosophy, which has seen scientists as well as philosophers
concluding that philosophy is dead and has dissolved into the
sciences. It seeks to answer the question of whether or not
philosophy can still be fruitful and what kind of philosophy can be
such. The author argues that from its very beginning philosophy has
focused on knowledge and methods for acquiring knowledge. This
view, however, has generally been abandoned in the last century
with the belief that, unlike the sciences, philosophy makes no
observations or experiments and requires only thought. Thus, in
order for philosophy to once again be relevant, it needs to return
to its roots and focus on knowledge as well as methods for
acquiring knowledge. Accordingly, this book deals with several
questions about knowledge that are essential to this view of
philosophy, including mathematical knowledge. Coverage examines
such issues as the nature of knowledge; plausibility and common
sense; knowledge as problem solving; modeling scientific knowledge;
mathematical objects, definitions, diagrams; mathematics and
reality; and more. This monograph presents a new approach to
philosophy, epistemology, and the philosophy of mathematics. It
will appeal to graduate students and researchers with interests in
the role of knowledge, the analytic method, models of science, and
mathematics and reality.
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