"From the time of Pythagoras, we have been tempted to treat numbers as the ultimate or only truth. This book tells the history of that habit of thought. But more, it argues that the logic of counting sacrifices much of what makes us human, and that we have a responsibility to match the objects of our attention to the forms of knowledge that do them justice. Humans have extended the insights and methods of number and mathematics to more and more aspects of the world, even to their gods and their religions.Today those powers are greater than ever, as computation is applied to virtually every aspect of human activity.But the rules of mathematics do not strictly apply to many things-from elementary particles to people-in the world.By subjecting such things to the laws of logic and mathematics, we gain some kinds of knowledge, but we also lose others. How do our choices about what parts of the world to subject to the logics of mathematics affect how we live and how we die?This question is rarely asked, but it is urgent, because the sciences built upon those laws now govern so much of our knowledge, from physics to psychology.Number and Knowledge sets out to ask it. In chapters proceeding chronologically from Ancient Greek philosophy and the rise of monotheistic religions to the emergence of modern physics and economics, the book traces how ideals, practices, and habits of thought formed over millennia have turned number into the foundation-stone of human claims to knowledge and certainty.But the book is also a philosophical and poetic exhortation to take responsibility for that history, for the knowledge it has produced, and for the many aspects of the world and of humanity that it ignores or endangers.To understand what can be counted and what can't is to embrace the ethics of purposeful knowing"--
Computable model theory is also related to reverse mathematics, the project of classifying theorems of mathematics ... There is no canonical generalization of this sort, and so the kind of effective theory of uncountable mathematics one ...
... Uncountable. You will meet two characters who will help you through this world of matching sets and infinite numbers. One is the Professor, who generally speaks from the left side of the book, and always in Purple type. The other is the ...
... uncountable cofinality by closure of S ( K ) under countable unions ( Lemma 9.7 ) . Assume first that k is not a limit of Souslin cardinals itself ( so that , in particular , there is a largest k ' < k which is a limit of Souslin ...
... uncountable sets. We are particularly interested in the role that various properties of ideals play in the investigations of arithmetic of cardinal numbers. We show that there £" a deep relationship between saturation of ideals and the ...
... uncountable irrational number. Square root of minus one symbolises impossible non-existence that we know nothing about yet it keeps appearing. Imaginary numbers have been created in mathematics out of impossibility and are used to our ...
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A comprehensive introduction to eight major approaches to computation on uncountable mathematical domains.
Dense Subspaces in Hermitean Spaces of Uncountable Dimensions
This book provides an authoritative and multifaceted introduction to this exciting new area of research that is still in its early stages.
This book differentiates between two types of void, and aligns them with the Lacanian concepts of a true and a false hole and the psychoanalytic theory of primary repression.