This book deals with vector algebra and analysis and with their application to three-dimensional geometry and the analysis of fields in three dimensions. While many treatments of the application of vectors have approached the fundamentals of the subject intuitively, assuming some prior knowledge of
Euclidโs Heritage: Is Space Three-Dimensional?
โ Scribed by Peter Janich (auth.)
- Publisher
- Springer Netherlands
- Year
- 1992
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 236
- Series
- The University of Western Ontario Series in Philosophy of Science 52
- Edition
- 1
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
We live in a space, we get about in it. We also quantify it, we think of it as having dimensions. Ever since Euclid's ancient geometry, we have thought of bodies occupying parts of this space (including our own bodies), the space of our practical orientations (our 'movingยญ abouts'), as having three dimensions. Bodies have volume specified by measures of length, breadth and height. But how do we know that the space we live in has just these three dimensions? It is theoretiยญ cally possible that some spaces might exist that are not correctly described by Euclidean geometry. After all, there are the nonยญ Euclidian geometries, descriptions of spaces not conforming to the axioms and theorems of Euclid's geometry. As one might expect, there is a history of philosophers' attempts to 'prove' that space is three-dimensional. The present volume surveys these attempts from Aristotle, through Leibniz and Kant, to more recent philosophy. As you will learn, the historical theories are rife with terminology, with language, already tainted by the asยญ sumed, but by no means obvious, clarity of terms like 'dimension', 'line', 'point' and others. Prior to that language there are actions, ways of getting around in the world, building things, being interested in things, in the more specific case of dimensionality, cutting things. It is to these actions that we must eventually appeal if we are to understand how science is grounded.
โฆ Table of Contents
Front Matter....Pages i-xi
Front Matter....Pages 1-6
The Purely Spatial Approaches....Pages 7-26
Grounding Three-Dimensionality in Motion....Pages 27-56
Argument for Three-Dimensionality from Laws of Force....Pages 57-68
Causalistic Explanations and Three-Dimensionality....Pages 69-82
The Biological and Perception-Theoretical Approaches....Pages 83-109
Euclidโs Heritage: A Review of the History of the Problem....Pages 110-115
Front Matter....Pages 117-120
Knowledge about Space....Pages 121-135
The Construction of the Terminology....Pages 136-172
The Spatial Concept of Dimension and Its Universality....Pages 173-208
Back Matter....Pages 209-231
โฆ Subjects
Philosophy of Science; History of Mathematical Sciences; Epistemology; Geometry
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