Article ID: CBB001230056

Urbild und Abbild: Leibniz, Kant und Hausdorff über das Raumproblem (2010)

unapi

The article attempts to reconsider the relationship between Leibniz's and Kant's philosophy of geometry on the one hand and the nineteenth century debate on the foundation of geometry on the other. The author argues that the examples used by Leibniz and Kant to explain the peculiarity of the geometrical way of thinking are actually special cases of what the Jewish-German mathematician Felix Hausdorff called transformation principle, the very same principle that thinkers such as Helmholtz or Poincaré applied in a more general form in their celebrated philosophical writings about geometry. The first two parts of the article try to show that Leibniz's and Kant's philosophies of geometry, despite their differences, appear to be preoccupied with the common problem of the impossibility to grasp conceptually the intuitive difference between two figures (such as a figure and its scaled, displaced or mirrored copy). In the third part, it is argued that from the perspective of Hausdorff's philosophical-geometrical reflections, this very same problem seems to find a more radical application in Helmholtz's or Poincaré's thought experiments on the impossibility of distinguishing distorted copies of our universe from the original one. I draw the conclusion that in Hausdorff's philosophical work, which has received scholarly attention only recently, one can find not only an original attempt to frame these classical arguments from a set-theoretical point of view, but also the possibility of considering the history of philosophy of geometry from an uncommon perspective, where especially the significance of Kant's infamous appeal to intuition can be judged by more appropriate standards.

...More

Description On the “the relationship between Leibniz's and Kant's philosophy of geometry on the one hand and the nineteenth century debate on the foundation of geometry on the other.” (from the abstract)


Citation URI
https://data.isiscb.org/isis/citation/CBB001230056/

Similar Citations

Chapter Sutherland, Daniel; (2010)
Philosophy, Geometry, and Logic in Leibniz, Wolff, and the Early Kant (/isis/citation/CBB001033539/)

Article Domski, Mary; (2013)
Kant and Newton on the a priori Necessity of Geometry (/isis/citation/CBB001320266/)

Article Engelhard, Kristina; Mittelstaedt, Peter; (2008)
Kant's Theory of Arithmetic: A Constructive Approach? (/isis/citation/CBB001230070/)

Article Sutherland, Daniel; (2005)
Kant on Fundamental Geometrical Relations (/isis/citation/CBB000670505/)

Chapter Gerhard Heinzmann; (2016)
Kant et l'intuition épistémique (/isis/citation/CBB981942154/)

Chapter Carlo Casolo; (2018)
La Biblioteca Universale (/isis/citation/CBB604701261/)

Article Ferraro, Giovanni; Panza, Marco; (2012)
Lagrange's Theory of Analytical Functions and His Ideal of Purity of Method (/isis/citation/CBB001220403/)

Book Parsons, Charles; (2012)
From Kant to Husserl: Selected Essays (/isis/citation/CBB001253011/)

Book Vinci, Thomas C.; (2015)
Space, Geometry, and Kant's Transcendental Deduction of the Categories (/isis/citation/CBB001500573/)

Article Heis, Jeremy; (2011)
Ernst Cassirer's Neo-Kantian Philosophy of Geometry (/isis/citation/CBB001035116/)

Article Arthur, Richard T. W.; (2013)
Leibniz's Syncategorematic Infinitesimals (/isis/citation/CBB001211764/)

Article Domski, Mary; (2010)
Kant on the Imagination and Geometrical Certainty (/isis/citation/CBB001034596/)

Thesis Dunlop, Katherine Laura; (2005)
Kant on the Reality of Mathematical Definitions (/isis/citation/CBB001561682/)

Chapter Serfati, Michel; (2008)
Symbolic Inventiveness and “Irrationalist” Practices in Leibniz's Mathematics (/isis/citation/CBB001023822/)

Article Francesca Biagioli; (2020)
Ernst Cassirer's transcendental account of mathematical reasoning (/isis/citation/CBB961648354/)

Article De Pierris, Graciela; (2012)
Hume on Space, Geometry, and Diagrammatic Reasoning (/isis/citation/CBB001211479/)

Chapter Breger, Herbert; (2008)
The Art of Mathematical Rationality (/isis/citation/CBB001023823/)

Book Hyder, David Jalal; (2009)
The Determinate World: Kant and Helmholtz on the Physical Meaning of Geometry (/isis/citation/CBB001252396/)

Book Elena Anne Corie Marchisotto; Francisco Rodriguez-Consuegra; James T. Smith; (2021)
The Legacy of Mario Pieri in Foundations and Philosophy of Mathematics (/isis/citation/CBB763111584/)

Authors & Contributors
Sutherland, Daniel
Domski, Mary
Casolo, Carlo
Biagioli, Francesca
Vinci, Thomas C.
Smith, James T.
Journals
Studies in History and Philosophy of Science
Archive for History of Exact Sciences
Synthese
Perspectives on Science
Journal for General Philosophy of Science
British Journal for the History of Philosophy
Publishers
Walter de Gruyter
UTET
University of California, Los Angeles
Oxford University Press
Harvard University Press
Birkhäuser Basel
Concepts
Philosophy of mathematics
Mathematics
Geometry
Metaphysics
Philosophy
Space
People
Kant, Immanuel
Leibniz, Gottfried Wilhelm von
Newton, Isaac
Lagrange, Joseph Louis
Cassirer, Ernst
Wolff, Christian von
Time Periods
18th century
19th century
17th century
20th century, early
20th century
Places
Germany
England
Italy
France
Europe
Comments

Be the first to comment!

{{ comment.created_by.username }} on {{ comment.created_on | date:'medium' }}

Log in or register to comment