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(2016) A theory of philosophical fallacies, Dordrecht, Springer.

Lecture XI

Leonard Nelson

pp. 99-107

Poincaré's conventionalism in geometry results from presupposing, as though this was a mere analytic judgment, that the sources of knowledge are only two—logic and experience—exclusive of each other and exhausting all the possibilities. That presupposition also led Einstein, via a misunderstanding of Hilbert's axiomatic approach, to the idea that the axioms of geometry are empirical in character. Our knowledge of the non-logical principles of mathematics in general and of geometry in particular is synthetic a priori, but has epistemological attributes that are lacking in philosophy. That explains why all attempts at using the mathematical method to attain philosophical truth are doomed to failure.

Publication details

DOI: 10.1007/978-3-319-20783-4_12

Full citation:

Nelson, L. (2016). Lecture XI, in A theory of philosophical fallacies, Dordrecht, Springer, pp. 99-107.

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