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141Husserl and gödel’s incompleteness theoremsReview of Symbolic Logic 10 (4): 638-650. 2017.The paper examines Husserl’s interactions with logicians in the 1930s in order to assess Husserl’s awareness of Gödel’s incompleteness theorems. While there is no mention about the results in Husserl’s known exchanges with Hilbert, Weyl, or Zermelo, the most likely source about them for Husserl is Felix Kaufmann (1895–1949). Husserl’s interactions with Kaufmann show that Husserl may have learned about the results from him, but not necessarily so. Ultimately Husserl’s reading marks on Friedrich W…Read more
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130Logic as a Universal Medium or Logic as a Calculus? Husserl and the Presuppositions of “the Ultimate Presupposition of Twentieth Century Philosophy”Southern Journal of Philosophy 44 (4): 569-580. 2006.This paper discusses Jean van Heijenoort’s (1967) and Jaakko and Merrill B. Hintikka’s (1986, 1997) distinction between logic as auniversal language and logic as a calculus, and its applicability to Edmund Husserl’s phenomenology. Although it is argued that Husserl’s phenomenology shares characteristics with both sides, his view of logic is closer to the model-theoretical, logic-as-calculus view. However, Husserl’s philosophy as transcendental philosophy is closer to the universalist view. This …Read more
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125Mathematical roots of phenomenology: Husserl and the concept of numberHistory and Philosophy of Logic 27 (4): 319-337. 2006.The paper examines the roots of Husserlian phenomenology in Weierstrass's approach to analysis. After elaborating on Weierstrass's programme of arithmetization of analysis, the paper examines Husserl's Philosophy of Arithmetic as an attempt to provide foundations to analysis. The Philosophy of Arithmetic consists of two parts; the first discusses authentic arithmetic and the second symbolic arithmetic. Husserl's novelty is to use Brentanian descriptive analysis to clarify the fundamental concept…Read more
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172From geometry to phenomenologySynthese 162 (2): 225-233. 2008.Richard Tieszen [Tieszen, R. (2005). Philosophy and Phenomenological Research, LXX(1), 153–173.] has argued that the group-theoretical approach to modern geometry can be seen as a realization of Edmund Husserl’s view of eidetic intuition. In support of Tieszen’s claim, the present article discusses Husserl’s approach to geometry in 1886–1902. Husserl’s first detailed discussion of the concept of group and invariants under transformations takes place in his notes on Hilbert’s Memoir Ueber die Gru…Read more
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194Stefania Centrone. Logic and Philosophy of Mathematics in the Early Husserl. Synthese Library 345. Dordrecht: Springer, 2010. Pp. xxii + 232. ISBN 978-90-481-3245-4Philosophia Mathematica 18 (3): 344-349. 2010.It is beginning to be rather well known that Edmund Husserl, the founder of phenomenological philosophy, was originally a mathematician; he studied with Weierstrass and Kronecker in Berlin, wrote his doctoral dissertation on the calculus of variations, and was then a colleague of Cantor in Halle until he moved to the Göttingen of Hilbert and Klein in 1901. Much of Husserl’s writing prior to 1901 was about mathematics, and arguably the origin of phenomenology was in Husserl’s attempts to give phi…Read more
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117Phenomenology and mathematics (edited book)Springer. 2010.This volume aims to establish the starting point for the development, evaluation and appraisal of the phenomenology of mathematics.
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70Stefania Centrone. Logic and Philosophy of Mathematics in the Early Husserl. Synthese Library 345. Dordrecht: Springer, 2010. Pp. xxii+232. ISBN 978-90-481-3245-4: Correction to Book Review (review)Philosophia Mathematica 19 (1): 90-90. 2011.
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177Husserl and the Algebra of Logic: Husserl’s 1896 LecturesAxiomathes 22 (1): 121-133. 2012.In his 1896 lecture course on logic–reportedly a blueprint for the Prolegomena to Pure Logic –Husserl develops an explicit account of logic as an independent and purely theoretical discipline. According to Husserl, such a theory is needed for the foundations of logic (in a more general sense) to avoid psychologism in logic. The present paper shows that Husserl’s conception of logic (in a strict sense) belongs to the algebra of logic tradition. Husserl’s conception is modeled after arithmetic, an…Read more
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2042Muisti (edited book)Tampere University Press. 2013.Proceedings of the annual congress of the Finnish Philosophical Association in 2013. Theme: memory.
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100Burt C. Hopkins: The Origin of the Logic of Symbolic Mathematics. Edmund Husserl and Jacob Klein: Bloomington and Indianapolis, Indiana University Press, 2011, 559 pp., ISBN 978-0-253-35671-0 (review)Husserl Studies 29 (3): 239-249. 2013.
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44Hill, Claire Ortiz and Jairo Jose da Silva., The Road Not Taken, On Husserl's Philosophy of Logic and Mathematics (review)Review of Metaphysics 68 (1): 167-168. 2014.
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88Essays on Gödel's Reception of Leibniz, Husserl, and BrouwerHistory and Philosophy of Logic 37 (3): 297-299. 2016.The book collects together most of the essays on Kurt Gödel that Mark van Atten has either authored or co-authored. The essays portray Gödel's project as an attempt to use Husserlian phenomenology...
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169Syntactic reduction in Husserl’s early phenomenology of arithmeticSynthese 193 (3): 937-969. 2016.The paper traces the development and the role of syntactic reduction in Edmund Husserl’s early writings on mathematics and logic, especially on arithmetic. The notion has its origin in Hermann Hankel’s principle of permanence that Husserl set out to clarify. In Husserl’s early texts the emphasis of the reductions was meant to guarantee the consistency of the extended algorithm. Around the turn of the century Husserl uses the same idea in his conception of definiteness of what he calls “mathemati…Read more
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133Husserl on completeness, definitelySynthese 195 (4): 1509-1527. 2018.The paper discusses Husserl’s notion of definiteness as presented in his Göttingen Mathematical Society Double Lecture of 1901 as a defense of two, in many cases incompatible, ideals, namely full characterizability of the domain, i.e., categoricity, and its syntactic completeness. These two ideals are manifest already in Husserl’s discussion of pure logic in the Prolegomena: The full characterizability is related to Husserl’s attempt to capture the interconnection of things, whereas syntactic co…Read more
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University of HelsinkiDepartment of Philosophy (Theoretical Philosophy, Practical Philosophy, Philosophy in Swedish)Lecturer
Helsinki, Finland
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