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| Collection Name: | SpringerLink Online Journals
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| Collection Description: | The SpringerLink Online Journal collection includes more than 1,250 peer-reviewed journals published by Springer Science+Business Media. Through the Online Archives Collection almost every journal is available online from Volume I, Issue I. Springer organizes the Online Journals into fully indexed, fully searchable Subject Collections covering 11 subject and 2 international collections: - Behavioral Science - Biomedical and Life Sciences - Chemistry and Materials Science - Chinese Library of Science - Computer Science - Earth and Environmental Science - Engineering - Social Sciences - Mathematics & Statistics - Medicine - Physics and Astronomy - Russian Library of Science |
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Collection Information:
| Grade Level |
Higher Education
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| Link |
Http://www.springer.com/east/home/librarians?SGWID=5-117-6-169728-0
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| Resource Type |
Text
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| Subject Keyword(s) |
Anthropology
Behavioral Science
Behavioral Science; Biomedical and Life Sciences; Chemistry and Materials Science; Chinese Library Of Science; Computer Science; Earth and Environmental Science; Engineering; Social Sciences; Mathematics and Statistics; Medicine; Physics and Astronomy; Russian Library Of Science
Biological Science
Chemistry
Computer Science
Engineering
General Science
Geography
Geoscience
Health/Medicine
Materials Science
Mathematics
Physics
Psychology
Space Science
Technology
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| Resource Title: | Towards completeness: Husserl on theories of manifolds 1890–1901
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| Description: | Husserl’s notion of definiteness, i.e., completeness is crucial to understanding Husserl’s view of logic, and consequently several related philosophical views, such as his argument against psychologism, his notion of ideality, and his view of formal ontology. Initially Husserl developed the notion of definiteness to clarify Hermann Hankel’s ‘principle of permanence’. One of the first attempts at formulating definiteness can be found in the Philosophy of Arithmetic, where definiteness serves the purpose of the modern notion of ‘soundness’ and leads Husserl to a ‘computational’ view of logic. Inspired by Gauss and Grassmann Husserl then undertakes a further investigation of theories of manifolds. When Husserl subsequently renounces psychologism and changes his view of logic, his idea of definiteness also develops. The notion of definiteness is discussed most extensively in the pair of lectures Husserl gave in front of the mathematical society in Göttingen (1901). A detailed analysis of the lectures, together with an elaboration of Husserl’s lectures on logic beginning in 1895, shows that Husserl meant by definiteness what is today called ‘categoricity’. In so doing Husserl was not doing anything particularly original; since Dedekind’s ‘Was sind und sollen die Zahlen’ (1888) the notion was ‘in the air’. It also characterizes Hilbert’s (1900) notion of completeness. In the end, Husserl’s view of definiteness is discussed in light of Gödel’s (1931) incompleteness results. |
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Additional Resource Information
| Author |
Mirja Helena Hartimo
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| Bibliographic Citation |
Synthese 156(2), 281-310. (2007)
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| Intended Audience |
Graduate
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| Language |
En
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| Publisher / Resource Provider |
Kluwer Academic Publishers
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| Resource Format |
Application/pdf
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| Resource Type |
Text
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| Subject Keyword(s) |
Epistemology
Logic
Metaphysics
Philosophy
Philosophy Of Language
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