Logic and philosophy of mathematics in the early Husserl (Q1048732)

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Logic and philosophy of mathematics in the early Husserl
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    Logic and philosophy of mathematics in the early Husserl (English)
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    8 January 2010
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    Edmund Husserl is generally known as the philosopher who introduced the phenomenological method in philosophy. We associate his name with Heidegger and other phenomenological thinkers. Yet, he was trained as a mathematician and the first ten years of his academic life, 1891-1901, were devoted to the foundations of mathematics. Against the background of what was happening at the time, his work from that period is remarkable. He developed a philosophy of arithmetic in which he discussed the concepts of number and set. It contains valuable insights and he has, for example, what is essentially the notion of a partially recursive function. In his logical work he developed definitely modern ideas: the concept of a formal language and a formal system. Stefania Centrone must be commended for her thorough treatment of a little known decade in the intellectual life of an important philosopher. Moreover, her book is a welcome contribution to our further understanding of a very exciting period in the history of the foundations of mathematics.
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    Husserl
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