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Introduction foundations of mathematics
pp. 1-21
Résumé
Foundational questions in mathematics were born with Hilbert, but foundational programs existed before him. Arithmetization of analysis and arithmetization of algebra (for Kronecker) antidate Hilbert's idea of axiomatization. While Frege was struggling with the logical concept of number as the extension of a concept and while Cantor (and Dedekind) imagined infinite (transfinite) extensions of the ordinary number concept. Kronecker was busy devising a general arithmetic that would arithmetize mathematics without transcending the realm of the algebraic. The so-called foundational crisis did affect only the logicist program, comforting in a sense the arithmetical program. It is that program that Hilbert wanted to pursue with other means in order to rescue set theory from its logico-paradoxical consequences.
Détails de la publication
Publié dans:
Gauthier Yvon (2002) Internal logic: foundations of mathematics from Kronecker to Hilbert. Dordrecht, Springer.
Pages: 1-21
DOI: 10.1007/978-94-017-0083-2_1
Citation complète:
Gauthier Yvon, 2002, Introduction foundations of mathematics. In Y. Gauthier Internal logic (1-21). Dordrecht, Springer.