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Mathematicism

Mathematicism is 'the effort to employ the formal structure and rigorous method of mathematics as a model for the conduct of philosophy',[1] or the epistemological view that reality is fundamentally mathematical.[2] The term has been applied to a number of philosophers, including Pythagoras[3] and René Descartes[4] although the term was not used by themselves.

The role of mathematics in Western philosophy has grown and expanded from Pythagoras onwards. It is clear that numbers held a particular importance for the Pythagorean school, although it was the later work of Plato that attracts the label of mathematicism from modern philosophers. Furthermore it is René Descartes who provides the first mathematical epistemology which he describes as a mathesis universalis, and which is also referred to as mathematicism.

Pythagoras edit

 
Pythagoras with tablet of ratios

Although we don't have writings of Pythagoras himself, good evidence that he pioneered the concept of mathematicism is given by Plato, and summed up in the quotation often attributed to him that "everything is mathematics". Aristotle says of the Pythagorean school:

The first to devote themselves to mathematics and to make them progress were the so-called Pythagoreans. They, devoted to this study, believed that the principles of mathematics were also the principles of all things that be. Now, since the principles of mathematics are numbers, and they thought they found in numbers, more than in fire and earth and water, similarities with things that are and that become (they judged, for example, that justice was a particular property of numbers, the soul and mind another, opportunity another, and similarly, so to say, anything else), and since furthermore they saw expressed by numbers the properties and the ratios of harmony, since finally everything in nature appeared to them to be similar to numbers, and numbers appeared to be first among all there is in nature, they thought that the elements of numbers were the elements of all that there is, and that the whole world was harmony and number. And all the properties they could find in numbers and in musical chords, corresponding to properties and parts of the sky, and in general to the whole cosmic order, they gathered and adapted to it. And if something was missing, they made an effort to introduce it, so that their tractation be complete. To clarify with an example: since ten seems to be a perfect number and to contain in itself the whole nature of numbers, they said that the bodies that move in the sky are also ten: and since one can only see nine, they added as tenth the anti-Earth.

— Metaphysics A 5. 985 b 23

Further evidence for the views of Pythagoras and his school, although fragmentary and sometimes contradictory, comes from Alexander Polyhistor. Alexander tells us that central doctrines of the Pythagorieans were the harmony of numbers and the ideal that the mathematical world has primacy over, or can account for the existence of, the physical world.[5]

According to Aristotle, the Pythagoreans used mathematics for solely mystical reasons, devoid of practical application.[6] They believed that all things were made of numbers.[7][8] The number one (the monad) represented the origin of all things[9] and other numbers similarly had symbolic representations. Nevertheless modern scholars debate whether this numerology was taught by Pythagoras himself or whether it was original to the later philosopher of the Pythagorean school, Philolaus of Croton.[10]

Walter Burkert argues in his study Lore and Science in Ancient Pythagoreanism, that the only mathematics the Pythagoreans ever actually engaged in was simple, proofless arithmetic,[11] but that these arithmetic discoveries did contribute significantly to the beginnings of mathematics.[12]

Plato edit

The Pythagorian school influenced the work of Plato. Mathematical Platonism is the metaphysical view that (a) there are abstract mathematical objects whose existence is independent of us, and (b) there are true mathematical sentences that provide true descriptions of such objects. The independence of the mathematical objects is such that they are non physical and do not exist in space or time. Neither does their existence rely on thought or language. For this reason, mathematical proofs are discovered, not invented. The proof existed before its discovery, and merely became known to the one who discovered it.[13]

In summary, therefore, Mathematical Platonism can be reduced to three propositions:

  • Existence: There are mathematical objects.
  • Abstractness: Mathematical objects are abstract.
  • Independence: Mathematical objects are independent of intelligent agents and their language, thought, and practices.

It is again not clear the extent to which Plato held to these views himself but they were associated with the Platonist school. Nevertheless, this was a significant progression in the ideas of mathematicism.[13]

Markus Gabriel refers to Plato in his Fields of Sense: A New Realist Ontology, and in so doing provides a definition for mathematicism. He says:

Ultimately, set-theoretical ontology is a remainder of Platonic mathematicism. Let mathematicism from here on be the view that everything that exists can be studied mathematically either directly or indirectly. It is an instance of theory-reduction, that is, a claim to the effect that every vocabulary can be translated into that of mathematics such that this reduction grounds all derivative vocabulary and helps us understand it significantly better.[14]

He goes on, however, to show that the term need not be applied merely to the set-theroetical ontology that he takes issue with, but for other mathematical ontologies.

Set-theoretical ontology is just one instance of mathematicism. Depending on one’s preferred candidate for the most fundamental theory of quantifiable structure, one can wind up with a graphtheoretical mathematicism, a set-theoretical, category-theoretical, or some other (maybe hybrid) form of mathematicism. However, mathematicism is metaphysics, and metaphysics need not be associated with ontology.[14]

René Descartes edit

 
Descartes, René – Discours de la méthode, 1692 – BEIC 1273122

Although mathematical methods of investigation have been used to establish meaning and analyse the world since Pythagoras, it was Descartes who pioneered the subject as epistemology, setting out Rules for the Direction of the Mind. He proposed that method, rather than intuition, should direct the mind, saying:

So blind is the curiosity with which mortals are possessed that they often direct their minds down untrodden paths, in the groundless hope that they will chance upon what they are seeking, rather like someone who is consumed with such a senseless desire to discover treasure that he continually roams the streets to see if he can find any that a passerby might have dropped [...] By 'a method' I mean reliable rules which are easy to apply, and such that if one follows them exactly, one will never take what is false to be true or fruitlessly expend one’s mental efforts, but will gradually and constantly increase one’s knowledge till one arrives at a true understanding of everything within one’s capacity

In the discussion of Rule Four,[16] Descartes' describes what he calls mathesis universalis:

Rule Four
We need a method if we are to investigate the truth of things.

[...] I began my investigation by inquiring what exactly is generally meant by the term 'mathematics' and why it is that, in addition to arithmetic and geometry, sciences such as astronomy, music, optics, mechanics, among others, are called branches of mathematics. [...] This made me realize that there must be a general science which explains all the points that can be raised concerning order and measure irrespective of the subject-matter, and that this science should be termed mathesis universalis — a venerable term with a well-established meaning — for it covers everything that entitles these other sciences to be called branches of mathematics. [...]

The concept of mathesis universalis was, for Descartes, a universal science modeled on mathematics. It is this mathesis universalis that is referred to when writers speak of Descartes' mathematicism.[4] Following Descartes, Leibniz attempted to derive connections between mathematical logic, algebra, infinitesimal calculus, combinatorics, and universal characteristics in an incomplete treatise titled "Mathesis Universalis", published in 1695.[citation needed] Following on from Leibniz, Benedict de Spinoza and then various 20th century philosophers, including Bertrand Russell, Ludwig Wittgenstein, and Rudolf Carnap have attempted to elaborate and develop Leibniz's work on mathematical logic, syntactic systems and their calculi and to resolve problems in the field of metaphysics.

Gottfried Leibniz edit

Leibniz attempted to work out the possible connections between mathematical logic, algebra, infinitesimal calculus, combinatorics, and universal characteristics in an incomplete treatise titled "Mathesis Universalis" in 1695.

In his account of mathesis universalis, Leibniz proposed a dual method of universal synthesis and analysis for the ascertaining truth, described in De Synthesi et Analysi universale seu Arte inveniendi et judicandi (1890).[18][19]

Ludwig Wittgenstein edit

One of the perhaps most prominent critics of the idea of mathesis universalis was Ludwig Wittgenstein and his philosophy of mathematics.[20] As anthropologist Emily Martin notes:[21]

Tackling mathematics, the realm of symbolic life perhaps most difficult to regard as contingent on social norms, Wittgenstein commented that people found the idea that numbers rested on conventional social understandings "unbearable".

Bertrand Russell and Alfred North Whitehead edit

The Principia Mathematica is a three-volume work on the foundations of mathematics written by the mathematicians Alfred North Whitehead and Bertrand Russell and published in 1910, 1912, and 1913. According to its introduction, this work had three aims:

  1. To analyze to the greatest possible extent the ideas and methods of mathematical logic and to minimize the number of primitive notions, axioms, and inference rules;
  2. To precisely express mathematical propositions in symbolic logic using the most convenient notation that precise expression allows;
  3. To solve the paradoxes that plagued logic and set theory at the turn of the 20th century, like Russell's paradox.[22]

There is no doubt that Principia Mathematica is of great importance in the history of mathematics and philosophy: as Irvine has noted, it sparked interest in symbolic logic and advanced the subject by popularizing it; it showcased the powers and capacities of symbolic logic; and it showed how advances in philosophy of mathematics and symbolic logic could go hand-in-hand with tremendous fruitfulness.[23] Indeed, the work was in part brought about by an interest in logicism, the view on which all mathematical truths are logical truths. It was in part thanks to the advances made in Principia Mathematica that, despite its defects, numerous advances in meta-logic were made, including Gödel's incompleteness theorems.

Michel Foucault edit

In The Order of Things, Michel Foucault discuses mathesis as the conjunction point in the ordering of simple natures and algebra, paralleling his concept of taxinomia. Though omitting explicit references to universality, Foucault uses the term to organise and interpret all of human science, as is evident in the full title of his book: "The Order of Things: An Archaeology of the Human Sciences".[24]

Tim Maudlin edit

Tim Maudlin's mathematical universe hypothesis attempts to construct "a rigorous mathematical structure using primitive terms that give a natural fit with physics"[citation needed] and investigating why mathematics should provide such a powerful language for describing the physical world.[25] According to Maudlin, "the most satisfying possible answer to such a question is: because the physical world literally has a mathematical structure".

See also edit

References edit


Bibliography edit

  • "Mathematicism". Encyclopaedia Britannica. 1998. Retrieved 11 August 2022.
  • Burkert, Walter (1 June 1972), Lore and Science in Ancient Pythagoreanism, Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press, ISBN 978-0-674-53918-1
  • Capparelli, Vincenzo (1941). La sapienza di Pitagora. Edizioni Mediterranee. pp. 1–47.
  • Foucault, Michel (2010). The Order of Things: an archaeology of the human sciences. London: Routledge.
  • Gabriel, Markus (2015). Fields of sense : a new realist ontology. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press. ISBN 978-0748692897.
  • Gilson, Étienne (1937). The unity of philosophical experience (PDF). New York : C. Scribner's Sons. pp. 125–220. Retrieved 13 August 2022.
  • Irvine, Andrew D. (2003). "Principia Mathematica (Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy)". Metaphysics Research Lab, CSLI, Stanford University. Retrieved 5 August 2009.
  • Joost-Gaugier, Christiane L. (2006), Measuring Heaven: Pythagoras and his Influence on Thought and Art in Antiquity and the Middle Ages, Ithaca, New York: Cornell University Press, ISBN 978-0-8014-7409-5
  • Kahn, Charles H. (2001), Pythagoras and the Pythagoreans: A Brief History, Indianapolis, Indiana and Cambridge, England: Hackett Publishing Company, ISBN 978-0-87220-575-8
  • Linnebo, Øystein (2018). Platonism in the Philosophy of Mathematics. The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. Retrieved 14 August 2022.
  • Marciszewski, Witold (1984). "The principle of comprehension as a present-day contribution to mathesis universalis". Philosophia Naturalis (21): 525–526.
  • Martin, Emily (2013). "The Potentiality of Ethnography and the Limits of Affect Theory". Current Anthropology. 54 (S7): 156. doi:10.1086/670388. S2CID 143944116.
  • Maudlin, Tim (2014). New foundations for physical geometry : the theory of linear structures. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0198701309.
  • OED, Eds. (2001). Oxford English Dictionary (3 ed.). Ocford University Press. Retrieved 13 August 2022.
  • Rhees, Rush (1970). Discussions of Wittgenstein. New York: Schocken.
  • Riedweg, Christoph (2005) [2002], Pythagoras: His Life, Teachings, and Influence, Ithaca, New York: Cornell University Press, ISBN 978-0-8014-7452-1* Romanov, Oleg (2019). "Alexander Polyhistor (1st cn. B.C.E.)". The Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy. Retrieved 14 August 2022.
  • Sasaki, Chikara (2003). "'Mathesis Universalis' in the Seventeenth Century". Descartes's Mathematical Thought. Boston Studies in the Philosophy of Science. Vol. 237. pp. 359–418. doi:10.1007/978-94-017-1225-5_10. ISBN 978-90-481-6487-5.
  • Descartes, René (20 May 1985). "Rules for the Direction of the Mind". The Philosophical Writings of Descartes. Translated by Cottingham, John. Cambridge University Press. pp. 7–78. doi:10.1017/CBO9780511805042.004.
  • Whitehead, Whitehead, Alfred North and Bertrand Russell (1963). Principia Mathematica. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. pp. 1.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)

External links edit

  •   Media related to Mathematicism at Wikimedia Commons
  • Raul Corazzon's Ontology web page: Mathesis Universalis with a bibliography
  • "mathematicism". Britannica.
  • "mathematicism". Collins Dictionary.
  • . Oxford Living Dictionary. Archived from the original on 15 January 2018.

mathematicism, effort, employ, formal, structure, rigorous, method, mathematics, model, conduct, philosophy, epistemological, view, that, reality, fundamentally, mathematical, term, been, applied, number, philosophers, including, pythagoras, rené, descartes, a. Mathematicism is the effort to employ the formal structure and rigorous method of mathematics as a model for the conduct of philosophy 1 or the epistemological view that reality is fundamentally mathematical 2 The term has been applied to a number of philosophers including Pythagoras 3 and Rene Descartes 4 although the term was not used by themselves The role of mathematics in Western philosophy has grown and expanded from Pythagoras onwards It is clear that numbers held a particular importance for the Pythagorean school although it was the later work of Plato that attracts the label of mathematicism from modern philosophers Furthermore it is Rene Descartes who provides the first mathematical epistemology which he describes as a mathesis universalis and which is also referred to as mathematicism Contents 1 Pythagoras 2 Plato 3 Rene Descartes 4 Gottfried Leibniz 5 Ludwig Wittgenstein 6 Bertrand Russell and Alfred North Whitehead 7 Michel Foucault 8 Tim Maudlin 9 See also 10 References 11 Bibliography 12 External linksPythagoras edit nbsp Pythagoras with tablet of ratios Although we don t have writings of Pythagoras himself good evidence that he pioneered the concept of mathematicism is given by Plato and summed up in the quotation often attributed to him that everything is mathematics Aristotle says of the Pythagorean school The first to devote themselves to mathematics and to make them progress were the so called Pythagoreans They devoted to this study believed that the principles of mathematics were also the principles of all things that be Now since the principles of mathematics are numbers and they thought they found in numbers more than in fire and earth and water similarities with things that are and that become they judged for example that justice was a particular property of numbers the soul and mind another opportunity another and similarly so to say anything else and since furthermore they saw expressed by numbers the properties and the ratios of harmony since finally everything in nature appeared to them to be similar to numbers and numbers appeared to be first among all there is in nature they thought that the elements of numbers were the elements of all that there is and that the whole world was harmony and number And all the properties they could find in numbers and in musical chords corresponding to properties and parts of the sky and in general to the whole cosmic order they gathered and adapted to it And if something was missing they made an effort to introduce it so that their tractation be complete To clarify with an example since ten seems to be a perfect number and to contain in itself the whole nature of numbers they said that the bodies that move in the sky are also ten and since one can only see nine they added as tenth the anti Earth Metaphysics A 5 985 b 23 Further evidence for the views of Pythagoras and his school although fragmentary and sometimes contradictory comes from Alexander Polyhistor Alexander tells us that central doctrines of the Pythagorieans were the harmony of numbers and the ideal that the mathematical world has primacy over or can account for the existence of the physical world 5 According to Aristotle the Pythagoreans used mathematics for solely mystical reasons devoid of practical application 6 They believed that all things were made of numbers 7 8 The number one the monad represented the origin of all things 9 and other numbers similarly had symbolic representations Nevertheless modern scholars debate whether this numerology was taught by Pythagoras himself or whether it was original to the later philosopher of the Pythagorean school Philolaus of Croton 10 Walter Burkert argues in his study Lore and Science in Ancient Pythagoreanism that the only mathematics the Pythagoreans ever actually engaged in was simple proofless arithmetic 11 but that these arithmetic discoveries did contribute significantly to the beginnings of mathematics 12 Plato editThe Pythagorian school influenced the work of Plato Mathematical Platonism is the metaphysical view that a there are abstract mathematical objects whose existence is independent of us and b there are true mathematical sentences that provide true descriptions of such objects The independence of the mathematical objects is such that they are non physical and do not exist in space or time Neither does their existence rely on thought or language For this reason mathematical proofs are discovered not invented The proof existed before its discovery and merely became known to the one who discovered it 13 In summary therefore Mathematical Platonism can be reduced to three propositions Existence There are mathematical objects Abstractness Mathematical objects are abstract Independence Mathematical objects are independent of intelligent agents and their language thought and practices It is again not clear the extent to which Plato held to these views himself but they were associated with the Platonist school Nevertheless this was a significant progression in the ideas of mathematicism 13 Markus Gabriel refers to Plato in his Fields of Sense A New Realist Ontology and in so doing provides a definition for mathematicism He says Ultimately set theoretical ontology is a remainder of Platonic mathematicism Let mathematicism from here on be the view that everything that exists can be studied mathematically either directly or indirectly It is an instance of theory reduction that is a claim to the effect that every vocabulary can be translated into that of mathematics such that this reduction grounds all derivative vocabulary and helps us understand it significantly better 14 He goes on however to show that the term need not be applied merely to the set theroetical ontology that he takes issue with but for other mathematical ontologies Set theoretical ontology is just one instance of mathematicism Depending on one s preferred candidate for the most fundamental theory of quantifiable structure one can wind up with a graphtheoretical mathematicism a set theoretical category theoretical or some other maybe hybrid form of mathematicism However mathematicism is metaphysics and metaphysics need not be associated with ontology 14 Rene Descartes edit nbsp Descartes Rene Discours de la methode 1692 BEIC 1273122 Although mathematical methods of investigation have been used to establish meaning and analyse the world since Pythagoras it was Descartes who pioneered the subject as epistemology setting out Rules for the Direction of the Mind He proposed that method rather than intuition should direct the mind saying So blind is the curiosity with which mortals are possessed that they often direct their minds down untrodden paths in the groundless hope that they will chance upon what they are seeking rather like someone who is consumed with such a senseless desire to discover treasure that he continually roams the streets to see if he can find any that a passerby might have dropped By a method I mean reliable rules which are easy to apply and such that if one follows them exactly one will never take what is false to be true or fruitlessly expend one s mental efforts but will gradually and constantly increase one s knowledge till one arrives at a true understanding of everything within one s capacity Rene Descartes Rules for the Direction of the Mind translated by John Cottingham 15 In the discussion of Rule Four 16 Descartes describes what he calls mathesis universalis Rule Four We need a method if we are to investigate the truth of things I began my investigation by inquiring what exactly is generally meant by the term mathematics and why it is that in addition to arithmetic and geometry sciences such as astronomy music optics mechanics among others are called branches of mathematics This made me realize that there must be a general science which explains all the points that can be raised concerning order and measure irrespective of the subject matter and that this science should be termed mathesis universalis a venerable term with a well established meaning for it covers everything that entitles these other sciences to be called branches of mathematics Rene Descartes Rules for the Direction of the Mind translated by John Cottingham 17 The concept of mathesis universalis was for Descartes a universal science modeled on mathematics It is this mathesis universalis that is referred to when writers speak of Descartes mathematicism 4 Following Descartes Leibniz attempted to derive connections between mathematical logic algebra infinitesimal calculus combinatorics and universal characteristics in an incomplete treatise titled Mathesis Universalis published in 1695 citation needed Following on from Leibniz Benedict de Spinoza and then various 20th century philosophers including Bertrand Russell Ludwig Wittgenstein and Rudolf Carnap have attempted to elaborate and develop Leibniz s work on mathematical logic syntactic systems and their calculi and to resolve problems in the field of metaphysics Gottfried Leibniz editLeibniz attempted to work out the possible connections between mathematical logic algebra infinitesimal calculus combinatorics and universal characteristics in an incomplete treatise titled Mathesis Universalis in 1695 In his account of mathesis universalis Leibniz proposed a dual method of universal synthesis and analysis for the ascertaining truth described in De Synthesi et Analysi universale seu Arte inveniendi et judicandi 1890 18 19 Ludwig Wittgenstein editOne of the perhaps most prominent critics of the idea of mathesis universalis was Ludwig Wittgenstein and his philosophy of mathematics 20 As anthropologist Emily Martin notes 21 Tackling mathematics the realm of symbolic life perhaps most difficult to regard as contingent on social norms Wittgenstein commented that people found the idea that numbers rested on conventional social understandings unbearable Bertrand Russell and Alfred North Whitehead editThe Principia Mathematica is a three volume work on the foundations of mathematics written by the mathematicians Alfred North Whitehead and Bertrand Russell and published in 1910 1912 and 1913 According to its introduction this work had three aims To analyze to the greatest possible extent the ideas and methods of mathematical logic and to minimize the number of primitive notions axioms and inference rules To precisely express mathematical propositions in symbolic logic using the most convenient notation that precise expression allows To solve the paradoxes that plagued logic and set theory at the turn of the 20th century like Russell s paradox 22 There is no doubt that Principia Mathematica is of great importance in the history of mathematics and philosophy as Irvine has noted it sparked interest in symbolic logic and advanced the subject by popularizing it it showcased the powers and capacities of symbolic logic and it showed how advances in philosophy of mathematics and symbolic logic could go hand in hand with tremendous fruitfulness 23 Indeed the work was in part brought about by an interest in logicism the view on which all mathematical truths are logical truths It was in part thanks to the advances made in Principia Mathematica that despite its defects numerous advances in meta logic were made including Godel s incompleteness theorems Michel Foucault editIn The Order of Things Michel Foucault discuses mathesis as the conjunction point in the ordering of simple natures and algebra paralleling his concept of taxinomia Though omitting explicit references to universality Foucault uses the term to organise and interpret all of human science as is evident in the full title of his book The Order of Things An Archaeology of the Human Sciences 24 Tim Maudlin editTim Maudlin s mathematical universe hypothesis attempts to construct a rigorous mathematical structure using primitive terms that give a natural fit with physics citation needed and investigating why mathematics should provide such a powerful language for describing the physical world 25 According to Maudlin the most satisfying possible answer to such a question is because the physical world literally has a mathematical structure See also editDigital Physics Mathematical Psychology Modern Platonism Unit point atomism Wolfram Physics Project Mathematical universe hypothesis Characteristica universalis De Arte Combinatoria An Essay towards a Real Character and a Philosophical Language Lingua generalisReferences edit Britannica 1998 OED 2001 Capparelli 1941 a b Gilson 1937 Romanov 2019 Burkert 1972 pp 467 468 Burkert 1972 p 265 Kahn 2001 p 27 Riedweg 2005 p 23 Joost Gaugier 2006 pp 87 88 Burkert 1972 pp 428 433 Burkert 1972 p 465 a b Linnebo 2018 a b Gabriel 2015 Descartes 1985 Sasaki 2003 p 359 Descartes 1985 pp 19 20 Sasaki 2003 Marciszewski 1984 Rhees 1970 Martin 2013 Whitehead 1963 Irvine 2003 Foucault 2010 p page needed Maudlin 2014 Bibliography edit Mathematicism Encyclopaedia Britannica 1998 Retrieved 11 August 2022 Burkert Walter 1 June 1972 Lore and Science in Ancient Pythagoreanism Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0 674 53918 1 Capparelli Vincenzo 1941 La sapienza di Pitagora Edizioni Mediterranee pp 1 47 Foucault Michel 2010 The Order of Things an archaeology of the human sciences London Routledge Gabriel Markus 2015 Fields of sense a new realist ontology Edinburgh Edinburgh University Press ISBN 978 0748692897 Gilson Etienne 1937 The unity of philosophical experience PDF New York C Scribner s Sons pp 125 220 Retrieved 13 August 2022 Irvine Andrew D 2003 Principia Mathematica Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Metaphysics Research Lab CSLI Stanford University Retrieved 5 August 2009 Joost Gaugier Christiane L 2006 Measuring Heaven Pythagoras and his Influence on Thought and Art in Antiquity and the Middle Ages Ithaca New York Cornell University Press ISBN 978 0 8014 7409 5 Kahn Charles H 2001 Pythagoras and the Pythagoreans A Brief History Indianapolis Indiana and Cambridge England Hackett Publishing Company ISBN 978 0 87220 575 8 Linnebo Oystein 2018 Platonism in the Philosophy of Mathematics The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Retrieved 14 August 2022 Marciszewski Witold 1984 The principle of comprehension as a present day contribution to mathesis universalis Philosophia Naturalis 21 525 526 Martin Emily 2013 The Potentiality of Ethnography and the Limits of Affect Theory Current Anthropology 54 S7 156 doi 10 1086 670388 S2CID 143944116 Maudlin Tim 2014 New foundations for physical geometry the theory of linear structures Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0198701309 OED Eds 2001 Oxford English Dictionary 3 ed Ocford University Press Retrieved 13 August 2022 Rhees Rush 1970 Discussions of Wittgenstein New York Schocken Riedweg Christoph 2005 2002 Pythagoras His Life Teachings and Influence Ithaca New York Cornell University Press ISBN 978 0 8014 7452 1 Romanov Oleg 2019 Alexander Polyhistor 1st cn B C E The Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy Retrieved 14 August 2022 Sasaki Chikara 2003 Mathesis Universalis in the Seventeenth Century Descartes s Mathematical Thought Boston Studies in the Philosophy of Science Vol 237 pp 359 418 doi 10 1007 978 94 017 1225 5 10 ISBN 978 90 481 6487 5 Descartes Rene 20 May 1985 Rules for the Direction of the Mind The Philosophical Writings of Descartes Translated by Cottingham John Cambridge University Press pp 7 78 doi 10 1017 CBO9780511805042 004 Whitehead Whitehead Alfred North and Bertrand Russell 1963 Principia Mathematica Cambridge Cambridge University Press pp 1 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link External links edit nbsp Media related to Mathematicism at Wikimedia Commons Raul Corazzon s Ontology web page Mathesis Universalis with a bibliography mathematicism Britannica mathematicism Collins Dictionary mathematicism Oxford Living Dictionary Archived from the original on 15 January 2018 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Mathematicism amp oldid 1221387894, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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