Logic and Philosophy of Mathematics in the Early Husserl

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Logic and Philosophy of Mathematics in the Early Husserl focuses on the first ten years of Edmund Husserl’s work, from the publication of his Philosophy of Arithmetic (1891) to that of his Logical Investigations (1900/01), and aims to precisely locate his early work in the fields of logic, philosophy of logic and philosophy of mathematics. Unlike most phenomenologists, the author refrains from reading Husserl’s early work as a more or less immature sketch of claims consolidated only in his later phenomenology, and unlike the majority of historians of logic she emphasizes the systematic strength and the originality of Husserl’s logico-mathematical work.

The book attempts to reconstruct the discussion between Husserl and those philosophers and mathematicians who contributed to new developments in logic, such as Leibniz, Bolzano, the logical algebraists (especially Boole and Schröder), Frege, and Hilbert and his school. It presents both a comprehensive critical examination of some of the major works produced by Husserl and his antagonists in the last decade of the 19th century and a formal reconstruction of many texts from Husserl’s Nachlaß that have not yet been the object of systematical scrutiny.

This volume will be of particular interest to researchers working in the history, and in the philosophy, of logic and mathematics, and more generally, to analytical philosophers and phenomenologists with a background in standard logic.

Author(s): Stefania Centrone
Series: Synthese Library 345
Publisher: Springer
Year: 2010

Language: English
Pages: 250
Tags: Epistemology; Mathematical Logic and Foundations; History of Philosophy; Logic; Phenomenology; Philosophy of Science

Front Matter....Pages i-xxi
Philosophy of Arithmetic....Pages 1-98
The Idea of Pure Logic....Pages 99-147
The Imaginary in Mathematics....Pages 149-213
Back Matter....Pages 215-232