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Husserl and Realism in Logic and Mathematics

Part of the Modern European Philosophy series
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Mathematics and logic present crucial cases in deciding whether the world is of our making or whether some form of realism is true.

Edmund Husserl, who was initially a mathematician, discusses this general question extensively, but although his views influenced the Dutch intuitionists and were taken very seriously by Godel, they have not been widely appreciated among analytical philosophers.

In this book Robert Tragesser sets out to determine the conditions under which a realist ontology of mathematics and logic might be justified, taking as his starting point Husserl's treatment of these metaphysical problems.

He does not aim primarily at an exposition of Husserl's phenomenology, although many of the central claims of phenomenology are clarified here.

Rather he exploits its ideas and methods to show how they can contribute to answering Michael Dummet's question 'Realism or Anti-Realism?'.

In doing so he makes a challenging and provocative contribution to the debate.

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Product Details
Cambridge University Press
0521242975 / 9780521242974
Hardback
16/02/1984
United States
144 pages
138 x 216 mm, 290 grams