Linguistique de l’écrit

Revue internationale en libre accès

Collections | Livre | Chapitre

224843

Lecture XI

Leonard Nelson

pp. 99-107

Résumé

Poincaré's conventionalism in geometry results from presupposing, as though this was a mere analytic judgment, that the sources of knowledge are only two—logic and experience—exclusive of each other and exhausting all the possibilities. That presupposition also led Einstein, via a misunderstanding of Hilbert's axiomatic approach, to the idea that the axioms of geometry are empirical in character. Our knowledge of the non-logical principles of mathematics in general and of geometry in particular is synthetic a priori, but has epistemological attributes that are lacking in philosophy. That explains why all attempts at using the mathematical method to attain philosophical truth are doomed to failure.

Détails de la publication

Publié dans:

Nelson Leonard (2016) A theory of philosophical fallacies. Dordrecht, Springer.

Pages: 99-107

DOI: 10.1007/978-3-319-20783-4_12

Citation complète:

Nelson Leonard, 2016, Lecture XI. In L. Nelson A theory of philosophical fallacies (99-107). Dordrecht, Springer.