05804nam 2200709 a 450 991082640660332120240516111037.01-283-23454-897866132345441-84816-694-X(CKB)3400000000016054(EBL)840535(OCoLC)858227748(SSID)ssj0000538992(PQKBManifestationID)12177382(PQKBTitleCode)TC0000538992(PQKBWorkID)10569420(PQKB)11749772(MiAaPQ)EBC840535(WSP)0000P774(Au-PeEL)EBL840535(CaPaEBR)ebr10493543(CaONFJC)MIL323454(EXLCZ)99340000000001605420110624d2011 uy 0engur|n|---|||||txtccrMathematics and the natural sciences the physical singularity of life /Francis Bailly, Giuseppe Longo1st ed.London Imperial College Press ;Hackensack, N.J. Distributed by World Scientific Pub. Co. Pte. Ltd.c20111 online resource (337 p.)Advances in computer science and engineering: Texts ;v. 7English translation of the revised version of: F. Bailly and G. Longo, Mathématiques et sciences de la nature. La singularité physique du vivant, Hermann, Paris (2006).1-84816-693-1 Includes bibliographical references (p. 299-312) and index.Preface; Contents; Chapter 1 Mathematical Concepts and Physical Objects; Introduction; 1.1 On the Foundations of Mathematics. A First Inquiry; 1.1.1 Terminological issues?; 1.1.2 The genesis of mathematical structures and of their relationships - a few conceptual analogies; 1.1.3 Formalization, calculation, meaning, subjectivity; 1.1.4 Between cognition and history: Towards new structures of intelligibility; 1.2 Mathematical Concepts: A Constructive Approach; 1.2.1 Genealogies of concepts; 1.2.2 The "transcendent" in physics and in mathematics; 1.2.3 Laws, structures, and foundations1.2.4 Subject and objectivity1.2.5 From intuitionism to a renewed constructivism; 1.3 Regarding Mathematical Concepts and Physical Objects; 1.3.1 "Friction" and the determination of physical objects; 1.3.2 The absolute and the relative in mathematics and in physics; 1.3.3 On the two functions of language within the process of objectification and the construction of mathematical models in physics; 1.3.4 From the relativity to reference universes to that of these universes themselves as generators of physical invariances; 1.3.5 Physical causality and mathematical symmetry1.3.6 Towards the "cognitive subject"Chapter 2 Incompleteness and Indetermination in Mathematics and Physics; Introduction; 2.1 The Cognitive Foundations of Mathematics: Human Gestures in Proofs and Mathematical Incompleteness of Formalisms; 2.1.1 Introduction; 2.1.2 Machines, body, and rationality; 2.1.3 Ameba, motivity, and signification; 2.1.4 The abstract and the symbolic; the rigor; 2.1.5 From the Platonist response to action and gesture; 2.1.6 Intuition, gestures, and the numeric line; 2.1.7 Mathematical incompleteness of formalisms; 2.1.8 Iterations and closures on the horizon2.1.9 Intuition2.1.10 Body gestures and the "cogito"; 2.1.11 Summary and conclusion of part 2.1; 2.2 Incompleteness, Uncertainty, and Infinity: Differences and Similarities Between Physics and Mathematics; 2.2.1 Completeness/incompleteness in physical theories; 2.2.2 Finite/infinite in mathematics and physics; Chapter 3 Space and Time from Physics to Biology; 3.1 An Introduction to the Space and Time of Modern Physics; 3.1.1 Taking leave of Laplace; 3.1.2 Three types of physical theory: Relativity, quantum physics, and the theory of critical transitions in dynamical systems3.1.3 Some epistemological remarks3.2 Towards Biology: Space and Time in the "Field" of Living Systems; 3.2.1 The time of life; 3.2.2 More on Biological time; 3.2.3 Dynamics of the self-constitution of living systems; 3.2.4 Morphogenesis; 3.2.5 Information and geometric structure; 3.3 Spatiotemporal Determination and Biology; 3.3.1 Biological aspects; 3.3.2 Space: Laws of scaling and of critical behavior. The geometry of biological functions; 3.3.3 Three types of time; 3.3.4 Epistemological and mathematical aspects; 3.3.5 Some philosophy, to concludeChapter 4 Invariances, Symmetries, and Symmetry BreakingsThis book identifies the organizing concepts of physical and biological phenomena by an analysis of the foundations of mathematics and physics. Our aim is to propose a dialog between different conceptual universes and thus to provide a unification of phenomena. The role of "order" and symmetries in the foundations of mathematics is linked to the main invariants and principles, among them the geodesic principle (a consequence of symmetries), which govern and confer unity to various physical theories. Moreover, an attempt is made to understand causal structures, a central element of physical intAdvances in computer science and engineering.Texts ;v. 7.MathematicsPhilosophyPhysicsPhilosophyBiomathematicsMathematicsPhilosophy.PhysicsPhilosophy.Biomathematics.510.1Bailly Francis947087Longo G(Giuseppe)26352MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910826406603321Mathematics and the natural sciences4057658UNINA