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Publication details

Publisher: Springer

Place: Berlin

Year: 2010

Pages: 111-123

Series: The Philosophy of Science in a European Perspective

ISBN (Hardback): 9789048191147

Full citation:

Thomas Müller, "Formal methods in the philosophy of natural science", in: The present situation in the philosophy of science, Berlin, Springer, 2010

Abstract

What is the proper place of formal methods in philosophy of natural science, or in philosophy more broadly speaking? The idea that philosophy should proceed formally ("more geometrico", as in the title of Spinoza's Ethica) has been around for some time, but both the attitude towards formal methods and the understanding of formal methods itself has changed. Mathematical logic has succeeded geometrical demonstration as the paradigm of formal precision, and in technical areas such as foundations of mathematics and logic, Frege's and Russell's logicist programmes indicate early peaks of the application of these methods. The idea of employing such formal-logical methods in philosophy more generally was championed by the logical empiricism of the 1920s and 1930s. Wrestling with the methodological foundations of their discipline in an attempt to exclude what they perceived to be nonsense, some at the time even sought recourse in a purely formal-logical foundation for philosophy. Frege's student Carnap in his programmatic paper on "the old and the new logic" (Carnap, 1930, 26) put the matter thus: "To pursue philosophy means nothing but: clarifying the concepts and sentences of science by logical analysis."1

Cited authors

Publication details

Publisher: Springer

Place: Berlin

Year: 2010

Pages: 111-123

Series: The Philosophy of Science in a European Perspective

ISBN (Hardback): 9789048191147

Full citation:

Thomas Müller, "Formal methods in the philosophy of natural science", in: The present situation in the philosophy of science, Berlin, Springer, 2010