Limit this search to....

In the Light of Logic
Contributor(s): Feferman, Solomon (Author)
ISBN: 0195080300     ISBN-13: 9780195080308
Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA
OUR PRICE:   $212.85  
Product Type: Hardcover - Other Formats
Published: November 1998
Qty:
Annotation: In this collection of essays written over a period of twenty years, Solomon Feferman explains advanced results in modern logic and employs them to cast light on significant problems in the foundations of mathematics. Most troubling among these is the revolutionary way in which Georg Cantor
elaborated the nature of the infinite, and in doing so helped transform the face of twentieth-century mathematics. Feferman details the development of Cantorian concepts and the foundational difficulties they engendered. He argues that the freedom provided by Cantorian set theory was purchased at a
heavy philosophical price, namely adherence to a form of mathematical platonism that is difficult to support.
Beginning with a previously unpublished lecture for a general audience, Deciding the Undecidable, Feferman examines the famous list of twenty-three mathematical problems posed by David Hilbert, concentrating on three problems that have most to do with logic. Other chapters are devoted to the work
and thought of Kurt Godel, whose stunning results in the 1930s on the incompleteness of formal systems and the consistency of Cantors continuum hypothesis have been of utmost importance to all subsequent work in logic. Though Godel has been identified as the leading defender of set-theoretical
platonism, surprisingly even he at one point regarded it as unacceptable.
In his concluding chapters, Feferman uses tools from the special part of logic called proof theory to explain how the vast part--if not all--of scientifically applicable mathematics can be justified on the basis of purely arithmetical principles. At least to that extent, the question raised in two
of the essays of thevolume, Is Cantor Necessary?, is answered with a resounding no.
This volume of important and influential work by one of the leading figures in logic and the foundations of mathematics is essential reading for anyone interested in these subjects.
Additional Information
BISAC Categories:
- Philosophy | Logic
- Mathematics | Logic
Dewey: 511.3
LCCN: 97051336
Lexile Measure: 1500
Physical Information: 1.08" H x 6.12" W x 9.5" (1.43 lbs) 352 pages
 
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc.
Publisher Description:
In this collection of essays written over a period of twenty years, Solomon Feferman explains advanced results in modern logic and employs them to cast light on significant problems in the foundations of mathematics. Most troubling among these is the revolutionary way in which Georg Cantor
elaborated the nature of the infinite, and in doing so helped transform the face of twentieth-century mathematics. Feferman details the development of Cantorian concepts and the foundational difficulties they engendered. He argues that the freedom provided by Cantorian set theory was purchased at a
heavy philosophical price, namely adherence to a form of mathematical platonism that is difficult to support.

Beginning with a previously unpublished lecture for a general audience, Deciding the Undecidable, Feferman examines the famous list of twenty-three mathematical problems posed by David Hilbert, concentrating on three problems that have most to do with logic. Other chapters are devoted to the work
and thought of Kurt Gödel, whose stunning results in the 1930s on the incompleteness of formal systems and the consistency of Cantors continuum hypothesis have been of utmost importance to all subsequent work in logic. Though Gödel has been identified as the leading defender of set-theoretical
platonism, surprisingly even he at one point regarded it as unacceptable.

In his concluding chapters, Feferman uses tools from the special part of logic called proof theory to explain how the vast part--if not all--of scientifically applicable mathematics can be justified on the basis of purely arithmetical principles. At least to that extent, the question raised in two
of the essays of the volume, Is Cantor Necessary?, is answered with a resounding no.

This volume of important and influential work by one of the leading figures in logic and the foundations of mathematics is essential reading for anyone interested in these subjects.