Boekhandel Douwes Den Haag

Oxford Logic Guides

Positive Topology

A New Practice in Constructive Mathematics

Sambin, Giovanni

Positive Topology

Oxford Logic Guides

Positive Topology

A New Practice in Constructive Mathematics

Oxford Logic Guides: Positive Topology

Verschijnt binnenkort

 

This book contains the first systematic exposition of a new discipline called positive topology, which brings many conceptual and mathematical innovations and many benefits for mathematical practice and applications, for the first time extending Darwin's evolutionary vision to the practice of mathematics.


Levertijd op aanvraag

€ 168,00

Bezorgen: Zodra beschikbaar


Beschrijving Oxford Logic Guides: Positive Topology

Aimed at researchers in mathematics, philosophy and logic, this book provides the first organic exposition of dynamic constructivism and the mathematics ensuing in practice, including discussion of the technical development of the field and outlining the philosophical and methodological motivations underlying the evolution of the discipline.

In dynamic constructivism, mathematics is seen as the result of a dynamic process of interaction between the construction of mathematical entities, by abstraction and by idealization, and their selection according to their efficiency in applications to reality and in the organisation of mathematics itself.

The crucial benefit of this vision is its independence from dogmas and external authorities. A practical consequence is full respect for the diverse areas of mathematics - mainly computation, spatial intuition, deduction, and abstract axiomatic method - without reducing one to another. As a second consequence, a dynamic interaction between different 'epistemological levels' is always active and present, in the development of mathematics in practice, the study of its foundations and its formalisation in a computer language.


ISBN
9780199232888
Pagina's
624
Verschijnt
Serie
Oxford Logic Guides
Rubriek
Literaire fictie
Druk
1
Uitvoering
Hardback
Taal
Engels
Uitgever
OUP Oxford

Literaire fictie