Starry Reckoning: Reference and Analysis in Mathematics and Cosmology

Cham: Springer Verlag (2016)
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Abstract

This book deals with a topic that has been largely neglected by philosophers of science to date: the ability to refer and analyze in tandem. On the basis of a set of philosophical case studies involving both problems in number theory and issues concerning time and cosmology from the era of Galileo, Newton and Leibniz up through the present day, the author argues that scientific knowledge is a combination of accurate reference and analytical interpretation. In order to think well, we must be able to refer successfully, so that we can show publicly and clearly what we are talking about. And we must be able to analyze well, that is, to discover productive and explanatory conditions of intelligibility for the things we are thinking about. The book’s central claim is that the kinds of representations that make successful reference possible and those that make successful analysis possible are not the same, so that significant scientific and mathematical work typically proceeds by means of a heterogeneous discourse that juxtaposes and often superimposes a variety of kinds of representation, including formal and natural languages as well as more iconic modes. It demonstrates the virtues and necessity of heterogeneity in historically central reasoning, thus filling an important gap in the literature and fostering a new, timely discussion on the epistemology of science and mathematics.

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Chapters

Rethinking Ampliative Reasoning

I explore my methodological assumptions by showing why I put so much emphasis on analysis and its interplay with reference in my investigation of ampliative reasoning in mathematics and science. Reviewing recent important work by philosophers of mathematics Karine Chemla, Carlo Cellucci and Danielle... see more

Philosophy of Mathematics and Philosophy of History

The arguments in this book depend more on the study of history than on the study of logic; logic plays a role, but it is subordinate or subsidiary. Philosophers are now used to the idea that history is central to philosophy of science, but its pertinence to the philosophy of mathematics seems to nee... see more

The Representation of Time from 1700 to the Present

Leibniz influenced the contemporary cosmologists Roger Penrose and Lee Smolin, an influence I trace at the beginning of this chapter, which examines debates over the nature of time in recent centuries. I look at the revision of the concept of time occasioned by 19th c. Thermodynamics, and then Boltz... see more

Algebraic Number Theory and the Complex Plane

I review Nagel’s model of theory reduction, with its projection of a collapse of two discourses into one, and then Jeremy Butterfield’s critique of it. He argues that in physics, definitional extension is both too strong and two weak to conform to Nagel’s strict criteria, and so blocks the collapse.... see more

Fermat’s Last Theorem and the Logicians

I re-examine Enderton’s exposition of number theory in his logic textbook, and look at Gödel’s incompleteness theorems, to show that there too definitional extension is both too strong and two weak; the disparity and the resultant ambiguity in both the textbook and the proofs testify to the disparit... see more

Reference and Analysis

Productive mathematical and scientific research often takes place when more concrete discourse whose main intent is to establish and clarify reference is yoked with more abstract discourse whose main intent is analysis. The opposition between referential discourse and analytic discourse is explained... see more

Analysis and Reference in the Study of Astronomical Systems

This chapter examines the use of reference and analysis in the study of astronomical systems from Newton to the present day. I begin by noting that Bas van Fraassen pays more attention to theoretical models that do the work of analysis, while Nancy Cartwright and Margaret Morrisson pay more attentio... see more

The Representation of Time in the 17th Century

The foregoing arguments apply not only to mathematics but also to the sciences. Here I review the innovative mathematical representations of time in the work of Galileo, Descartes and Newton, and then turn to the debate over whether time is absolute or relative between Newton and his mouthpiece Clar... see more

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Emily Grosholz
Pennsylvania State University

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