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[The Western Ontario Series in Philosophy of Science] Intuition and the Axiomatic Method Volume 70 || The View from 1763: Kant on the Arithmetical Method Before Intuition

✍ Scribed by Carson, Emily; Huber, Renate


Book ID
120742177
Publisher
Springer-Verlag
Year
2006
Tongue
English
Weight
219 KB
Edition
2006
Category
Article
ISBN-13
9781402040399

No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.

✦ Synopsis


Following developments in modern geometry, logic and physics, many scientists and philosophers in the modern era considered Kant’s theory of intuition to be obsolete. But this only represents one side of the story concerning Kant, intuition and twentieth century science. Several prominent mathematicians and physicists were convinced that the formal tools of modern logic, set theory and the axiomatic method are not sufficient for providing mathematics and physics with satisfactory foundations. All of Hilbert, Gödel, Poincaré, Weyl and Bohr thought that intuition was an indispensable element in describing the foundations of science. They had very different reasons for thinking this, and they had very different accounts of what they called intuition. But they had in common that their views of mathematics and physics were significantly influenced by their readings of Kant. In the present volume, various views of intuition and the axiomatic method are explored, beginning with Kant’s own approach. By way of these investigations, we hope to understand better the rationale behind Kant’s theory of intuition, as well as to grasp many facets of the relations between theories of intuition and the axiomatic method, dealing with both their strengths and limitations; in short, the volume covers logical and non-logical, historical and systematic issues in both mathematics and physics.


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[The Western Ontario Series in Philosoph
✍ Carson, Emily; Huber, Renate 📂 Article 📅 2006 🏛 Springer-Verlag 🌐 English ⚖ 175 KB

Following developments in modern geometry, logic and physics, many scientists and philosophers in the modern era considered Kant’s theory of intuition to be obsolete. But this only represents one side of the story concerning Kant, intuition and twentieth century science. Several prominent mathematic