237285

(2002) Synthese 132 (3).

Weyl's appropriation of Husserl's and Poincaré's thought

Richard Feist

pp. 273-301

This article locates Weyl’s philosophy of mathematics and its relationship to his philosophy of science within the epistemological and ontological framework of Husserl’s phenomenology as expressed in the Logical Investigations and Ideas. This interpretation permits a unified reading of Weyl’s scattered philosophical comments in The Continuum and Space-Time-Matter. But the article also indicates that Weyl employed Poincar“s predicativist concerns to modify Husserl’s semantics and trim Husserl’s ontology. Using Poincar“s razor to shave Husserl’s beard leads to limitations on the least upper bound theorem in the foundations of analysis and Dirichlet’s principle in the foundations of physics. Finally, the article opens the possibility of reading Weyl as a systematic thinker, that he follows Husserl’s so-called transcendental turn in the Ideas. This permits an even more unified reading of Weyl’s scattered philosophical comments.

Publication details

DOI: 10.1023/A:1020370823738

Full citation:

Feist, R. (2002). Weyl's appropriation of Husserl's and Poincaré's thought. Synthese 132 (3), pp. 273-301.

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