Showing posts with label Gottlob Frege. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Gottlob Frege. Show all posts

Thursday, May 13, 2021

The limits of mathematics

Kurt Gödel

In the last decades of the nineteenth century, Friedrich Ludwig Gottlob Frege, a professor in the university of Vienna, undertook an ambitious goal: formalizing the arithmetic in a set of axioms and deduction rules, in such a way that every true theorem would be deductible from the axioms by a finite number of applications of the deduction rules. The result was a monumental book, Grundgesetze der Arithmetike (1893-1903), which introduced, among other things, a basic formalization of set theory and a cumbersome notation, quickly replaced by Peano’s, which we are using now.

Unfortunately for Frege, when the second volume of his book was about to be published, he received a letter from Bertrand Russell, proving that his formulation of set theory entails an inconsistency. In Frege’s set theory, some sets are not member of themselves (as the set of all integers, which is not an integer), while other sets are members of themselves (as the set of all infinite sets, which is an infinite set). Russell then defined this set: the set of all sets that are not members of themselves. It is easy to see that this set leads to a paradox: if it is a member of itself, it cannot be a member of itself, and vice versa. Russell’s paradox wreaked havoc with Frege’s work, who had to add a hasty appendix to his book and then abandoned his research on the fundamentals of mathematics.

Thursday, February 28, 2019

The debate of realism and anti-realism

Gottlob Frege

The secular debate between realism and nominalism (or anti-realism, its now preferred name), has been expressed in a few new theories of the so-called analytical philosophy, whose origin dates from the early twentieth century, with Gottlob Frege, Bertrand Russell, Ludwig Wittgenstein, the Circle of Vienna and several philosophers of the last fifty years, especially in the Anglo-Saxon world.
Currently, the two camps, realist and anti-realist, agree on one thing: science works. But although this is considered an incontrovertible fact, very divergent positions are posed to explain it.
As it has always happened throughout history, neither of the two fields is united. Both realism and anti-realism are divided into two branches, at the least.
Let us start by describing the realist position: