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1Loss of vision: How mathematics turned blind while it learned to see more clearlyIn Benedikt Löwe & Thomas Müller (eds.), PhiMSAMP: philosophy of mathematics: sociological aspsects and mathematical practice, College Publications. pp. 87-106. 2010.To discuss the developments of mathematics that have to do with the introduction of new objects, we distinguish between ‘Aristotelian’ and ‘non-Aristotelian’ accounts of abstraction and mathematical ‘top-down’ and ‘bottom-up’ approaches. The development of mathematics from the 19th to the 20th century is then characterized as a move from a ‘bottom-up’ to a ‘top-down’ approach. Since the latter also leads to more abstract objects for which the Aristotelian account of abstraction is not well-suite…Read more
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20BibliographyJournal for General Philosophy of Science / Zeitschrift für Allgemeine Wissenschaftstheorie 24 (2): 361-396. 1993.
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Remarks on the emergence of the concept “Spielraum” as a foundation for probability theory.
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Philosophy of Mathematics has become a well-established field of philosophical inquiry. And while it is quite common to attribute philosophers before Kant, from Plato through Locke, a philosophy of mathematics, the term itself was not coined before 1800. A longish paper underlying this talk traces the history of the new term and investigates the reasons philosophers and mathematicians had for adopting a new discipline with that name. In terms of its underlying methodology, the paper combines an …Read more
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1The usual, a commentary to trigger discussion.
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A brief presentation on occasion of Carnap’s visit to a meeting of the Indiana Philosophical Association at the same place exactly 75 ago; based on research in the archives of the IPA, the University of Pittsburgh, and the University of Konstanz. The lecture provides some hitherto unknown biographical background, a summary of Carnap's main arguments, and assigns it a place in Carnap's oeuvre.
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23Slides for the second tutorial on Gödel's incompleteness theorems, held at UniLog 5 Summer School, Istanbul, June 24, 2015.
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34Anmerkungen zum Beweis des zweiten Gödelschen UnvollständigkeitssatzesIn Georg Meggle & Julian Nida-Rümelin (eds.), Analyomen 2, Volume I: Logic, Epistemology, Philosophy of Science, De Gruyter. pp. 31-42. 1997.
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28While Gödel’s first theorem remains valid under substitution of various provability predicates, Gödel’s second theorem does not. This is one reason to label G1 as “extensional” but to call G2 “intensional.” Although this asymmetry between G1 and G2 is known for long, no satisfying account of G2’s intensionality has been put forward. After briefly reviewing the discussion so far, the paper presents a new analysis based on two observations. First, the underestimated role of provable closure under …Read more
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35Brief review article.
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20We clarify the respective roles fixed points, diagonalization, and self- reference play in proofs of Gödel’s first incompleteness theorem.
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164The Scope of Gödel’s First Incompleteness TheoremLogica Universalis 8 (3-4): 499-552. 2014.Guided by questions of scope, this paper provides an overview of what is known about both the scope and, consequently, the limits of Gödel’s famous first incompleteness theorem.
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1Brief review article.
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Brief review article.
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26Slides for the first tutorial on Gödel's incompleteness theorems, held at UniLog 5 Summer School, Istanbul, June 24, 2015.
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181Towards a new epistemology of mathematicsErkenntnis 68 (3): 309-329. 2008.In this introduction we discuss the motivation behind the workshop “Towards a New Epistemology of Mathematics” of which this special issue constitutes the proceedings. We elaborate on historical and empirical aspects of the desired new epistemology, connect it to the public image of mathematics, and give a summary and an introduction to the contributions to this issue.
Bernd Buldt
Purdue University Fort Wayne
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Purdue University Fort WayneMathematicsProfessor
Areas of Specialization
| Science, Logic, and Mathematics |
| History of Western Philosophy |