1.

Record Nr.

UNISALENTO991003037769707536

Autore

Galleria Doria Pamphilj

Titolo

Descrizione ragionata della Galleria Doria preceduta da un breve saggio di pittura dedicata a sua altezza la principessa di Radzivill ... / da Salvatore Tonci ..

Pubbl/distr/stampa

Roma : Luigi Perego Salvioni, 1794

Descrizione fisica

xviii, 235, [1] p. : 1 tav. pieg.; 16 cm.

Altri autori (Persone)

Tonci, Salvatoreauthor

Soggetti

Galleria Doria Pamphilj Cataloghi

Lingua di pubblicazione

Italiano

Formato

Microfilm

Livello bibliografico

Monografia

Note generali

Riproduzione in microfiche dell'originale conservato presso la Biblioteca Apostolica Vaticana

2.

Record Nr.

UNINA9910962305803321

Autore

Potter Michael D

Titolo

Reason's nearest kin : philosophies of arithmetic from Kant to Carnap / / Michael Potter

Pubbl/distr/stampa

Oxford ; ; New York, : Oxford University Press, 2000

ISBN

9780191520228

0191520225

Edizione

[1st ed.]

Descrizione fisica

x, 305 p

Disciplina

513/.01

Soggetti

Arithmetic - Philosophy

Mathematics - Philosophy

Lingua di pubblicazione

Inglese

Formato

Materiale a stampa

Livello bibliografico

Monografia

Nota di bibliografia

Includes bibliographical references (p. [290]-298) and index.

Nota di contenuto

Intro -- Contents -- Introduction -- 0.1 Arithmetic -- 0.2 The a priori



-- 0.3 Empiricism -- 0.4 Psychologism -- 0.5 Pure formalism -- 0.6 Trivial formalism -- 0.7 Reflexive formalism -- 0.8 Arithmetic and reason -- 1 Kant -- 1.1 Intuitions and concepts -- 1.2 Geometrical propositions -- 1.3 Arithmetical propositions -- 1.4 The Transcendental Deduction -- 1.5 Analytic and synthetic -- 1.6 The principle of analytic judgements -- 1.7 Geometry is not analytic -- 1.8 Arithmetic is not analytic -- 1.9 The principle of synthetic judgements -- 1.10 Geometry as synthetic -- 1.11 Arithmetic as synthetic -- 1.12 Arithmetic and sensibility -- 2 Grundlagen -- 2.1 Axiomatization -- 2.2 Arithmetic independent of sensibility -- 2.3 The Begriffsschrift -- 2.4 Frege's conception of analyticity -- 2.5 Numerically definite quantifiers -- 2.6 The numerical equivalence -- 2.7 Frege's explicit definition -- 2.8 The context principle again -- 2.9 The analyticity of the numerical equivalence -- 3 Dedekind -- 3.1 Dedekind's recursion theorem -- 3.2 Frege and Dedekind -- 3.3 Axiomatic structuralism -- 3.4 Existence -- 3.5 Uniqueness -- 3.6 Implicationism -- 3.7 Systems -- 3.8 Dedekind on existence -- 3.9 Dedekind on uniqueness -- 4 Frege's account of classes -- 4.1 The Julius Caesar problem yet again -- 4.2 The context principle in Grundgesetze -- 4.3 Russell's paradox -- 4.4 Numbers as concepts -- 4.5 The status of the numerical equivalence -- 5 Russell's account of classes -- 5.1 Propositions -- 5.2 The old theory of denoting -- 5.3 The new theory of denoting -- 5.4 The substitutional theory -- 5.5 Russell's propositional paradox -- 5.6 Frege's hierarchy of senses -- 5.7 Mathematical logic as based on the theory of types -- 5.8 Elementary propositions -- 5.9 The hierarchy of propositional functions in * 12.

5.10 The hierarchy of propositional functions in the Introduction -- 5.11 Typical ambiguity -- 5.12 Cumulative types -- 5.13 The hierarchy of classes -- 5.14 Numbers -- 5.15 The axiom of reducibility -- 5.16 Propositional functions and reducibility -- 5.17 The regressive method -- 5.18 The Introduction to Mathematical Philosophy -- 6 TheTractatus -- 6.1 Sign and symbol -- 6.2 The hierarchy of types -- 6.3 The doctrine of inexpressibility -- 6.4 Operations and functions -- 6.5 Sense -- 6.6 The rejection of class-theoretic foundations for mathematics -- 6.7 Number as the exponent of an operation -- 6.8 The adjectival strategy -- 6.9 Equations -- 6.10 Numerical identities -- 6.11 Generalization -- 6.12 The axiom of infinity -- 6.13 A transcendental argument -- 6.14 Another transcendental argument -- 7 The second edition of Principia -- 7.1 Logical atomism and empiricism -- 7.2 The hierarchy of propositional functions -- 7.3 Mathematical induction -- 7.4 The definition of identity -- 8 Ramsey -- 8.1 Propositions -- 8.2 Predicating functions -- 8.3 Extending Wittgenstein's account of identity -- 8.4 Propositional functions in extension -- 8.5 Wittgenstein's objections -- 8.6 The axiom of infinity -- 9 Hilbert's programme -- 9.1 Formal consistency -- 9.2 Real arithmetic -- 9.3 Schematic arithmetic -- 9.4 Ideal arithmetic -- 9.5 Metamathematics -- 9.6 Hilbert's programme -- 10 Gödel -- 10.1 Incompleteness -- 10.2 Formal theories -- 10.3 The unprovability of outer consistency -- 10.4 The demise of Hilbert's programme -- 10.5 The unprovability of consistency -- 10.6 Axiomatic formalism -- 11 Carnap -- 11.1 Language and symbolism -- 11.2 The rejection of the Tractatus -- 11.3 Conventionalism -- 11.4 Completeness -- 11.5 Consistency -- 11.6 Semantics -- 11.7 Pragmatics -- Conclusion -- Bibliography -- Index -- A -- B -- C -- D -- E -- F -- G -- H -- I -- J -- K.

L -- M -- N -- O -- P -- Q -- R -- S -- T -- U -- V -- W -- Z.

Sommario/riassunto

Reason's Nearest Kin is a critical examination of the most exciting period there has been in the philosophical study of the properties of



the natural numbers, from the 1880s to the 1930s. Reassessing the brilliant innovations of Frege, Russell, Wittgenstein, and others, which transformed philosophy as well as our understanding of mathematics, Michael Potter places arithmetic at the interface between experience, language, thought, and the world.