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212From Practice to New Concepts: Geometric Properties of GroupsPhilosophia Scientiae 1 (16-1): 129-151. 2012.The paper aims to show how mathematical practice, in particular with visual representations, can lead to new mathematical results. The argument is based on a case study from a relatively recent and promising mathematical subject—geometric group theory. The paper discusses how the representation of groups by Cayley graphs made possible to discover new geometric properties of groups.
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100Picture-Proofs and PlatonismCroatian Journal of Philosophy 7 (1): 81-92. 2007.This paper concerns the role of intuitions in mathematics, where intuitions are meant in the Kantian sense, i.e. the “seeing” of mathematical ideas by means of pictures, diagrams, thought experiments, etc.. The main problem discussed here is whether Platonistic argumentation, according to which some pictures can be considered as proofs (or parts of proofs) of some mathematical facts, is convincing and consistent. As a starting point, I discuss James Robert Brown’s recent book Philosophy of Mathe…Read more
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212Why do mathematicians need different ways of presenting mathematical objects? The case of cayley graphsTopoi 29 (1): 41-51. 2010.This paper investigates the role of pictures in mathematics in the particular case of Cayley graphs—the graphic representations of groups. I shall argue that their principal function in that theory—to provide insight into the abstract structure of groups—is performed employing their visual aspect. I suggest that the application of a visual graph theory in the purely non-visual theory of groups resulted in a new effective approach in which pictures have an essential role. Cayley graphs were initi…Read more
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187Mathematical knowledge: Intuition, visualization, and understandingTopoi 29 (1): 1-2. 2010.This paper investigates the role of pictures in mathematics in the particular case of Cayley graphs—the graphic representations of groups. I shall argue that their principal function in that theory—to provide insight into the abstract structure of groups—is performed employing their visual aspect. I suggest that the application of a visual graph theory in the purely non-visual theory of groups resulted in a new effective approach in which pictures have an essential role. Cayley graphs were initi…Read more
Bristol, United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland
Areas of Interest
| Epistemology |
| Philosophy of Cognitive Science |
| Philosophy of Mathematics |