Husserl and Mathematics explains the development of Husserl's phenomenological method in the context of his engagement in modern mathematics and its foundations. Drawing on his correspondence and other written sources, Mirja Hartimo details Husserl's knowledge of a wide range of perspectives on the foundations of mathematics, including those of Hilbert, Brouwer and Weyl, as well as his awareness of the new developments in the subject during the 1930s. Hartimo examines how Husserl's philosophical views responded to these changes, and offers a pluralistic and open-ended picture of Husserl's phenomenology of mathematics. Her study shows Husserl's phenomenology to be a method capable of both shedding light on and internally criticizing scientific practices and concepts.
Mirja Hartimo is Senior Researcher at the University of Jyväskylä, Finland. She is co-editor of Phenomenology and the Transcendental (with Sara Heinämaa, and Timo Miettinen, 2014), and has published numerous journal articles and book chapters on Husserl, phenomenology, and the history and philosophy of mathematics.
1. From the Division of Labor to Besinnung; 2. The Chimera of Logicism: Husserl's Criticism of Frege; 3. Clarifying the Goal of Modern Mathematics: Definiteness; 4. Normativity of the Euclidean Ideal; 5. Husserl's Formal and Transcendental Logic (1929); 6. Gödel, Skolem, and the Crisis of the 1930s; 7. Husserl's Combination View of Mathematics; 8. Kant and Husserl's Critical View of Logic; Epilogue: A Look Ahead.
'Edmund Husserl belongs to a lineage of philosophers for whom logic and mathematics were a primary source of philosophical reflection. In a jargon-free presentation, Hartimo skillfully guides us in the discovery of Husserl's attitude towards the mathematical practice of his time and insightfully analyzes the unfolding of his philosophical views on logic and mathematics as an attempt to make sense of this practice. This excellent book will benefit the general reader as well as the specialist.' Paolo Mancosu, University of California at Berkeley
Sara Heinämaa, Mirja Hartimo, Ilpo Hirvonen, Finland) Heinamaa, Sara (University of Jyvaskyla, Finland) Hartimo, Mirja (University of Jyvaskyla, Finland) Hirvonen, Ilpo (University of Helsinki
Sara Heinämaa, Mirja Hartimo, Ilpo Hirvonen, Finland) Heinamaa, Sara (University of Jyvaskyla, Finland) Hartimo, Mirja (University of Jyvaskyla, Finland) Hirvonen, Ilpo (University of Helsinki
Mirja Hartimo, Frode Kjosavik, Øystein Linnebo, Finland) Hartimo, Mirja (University of Helsinki, Norway) Kjosavik, Frode (Norwegian University of Life Sciences, Norway) Linnebo, Øystein (University of Oslo
Mirja Hartimo, Frode Kjosavik, Øystein Linnebo, Finland) Hartimo, Mirja (University of Helsinki, Norway) Kjosavik, Frode (Norwegian University of Life Sciences, Norway) Linnebo, Øystein (University of Oslo
Mirja Hartimo, Frode Kjosavik, Øystein Linnebo, Finland) Hartimo, Mirja (University of Helsinki, Norway) Kjosavik, Frode (Norwegian University of Life Sciences, Norway) Linnebo, Øystein (University of Oslo
Sara Heinämaa, Mirja Hartimo, Ilpo Hirvonen, Finland) Heinamaa, Sara (University of Jyvaskyla, Finland) Hartimo, Mirja (University of Jyvaskyla, Finland) Hirvonen, Ilpo (University of Helsinki
Mirja Hartimo, Frode Kjosavik, Øystein Linnebo, Finland) Hartimo, Mirja (University of Helsinki, Norway) Kjosavik, Frode (Norwegian University of Life Sciences, Norway) Linnebo, Øystein (University of Oslo
Sara Heinämaa, Mirja Hartimo, Ilpo Hirvonen, Finland) Heinamaa, Sara (University of Jyvaskyla, Finland) Hartimo, Mirja (University of Jyvaskyla, Finland) Hirvonen, Ilpo (University of Helsinki