Chapter
Licensed
Unlicensed
Requires Authentication
9. The Formation of Modern Conceptions of Formal Logic in the Development of Geometry
-
Ernest Nagel
You are currently not able to access this content.
You are currently not able to access this content.
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter I
- Acknowledgments VII
- Contents IX
- Introduction 1
- 1. Modern Science in Philosophical Perspective 7
- 2. Theory and Observation 29
- 3. Some Reflections on the Use of Language in the Natural Sciences 49
- 4. The Quest for Uncertainty 64
- 5. Philosophical Depreciations of Scientific Method 84
- 6. Issues in the Logic of Reductive Explanations 95
- 7. Carnap’s Theory of Induction 118
- 8. “Impossible Numbers”: A Chapter in the History of Modern Logic 166
- 9. The Formation of Modern Conceptions of Formal Logic in the Development of Geometry 195
- 10. Determinism and Development 260
- 11. Some Notes on Determinism 270
- 12. Teleology Revisited 275
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter I
- Acknowledgments VII
- Contents IX
- Introduction 1
- 1. Modern Science in Philosophical Perspective 7
- 2. Theory and Observation 29
- 3. Some Reflections on the Use of Language in the Natural Sciences 49
- 4. The Quest for Uncertainty 64
- 5. Philosophical Depreciations of Scientific Method 84
- 6. Issues in the Logic of Reductive Explanations 95
- 7. Carnap’s Theory of Induction 118
- 8. “Impossible Numbers”: A Chapter in the History of Modern Logic 166
- 9. The Formation of Modern Conceptions of Formal Logic in the Development of Geometry 195
- 10. Determinism and Development 260
- 11. Some Notes on Determinism 270
- 12. Teleology Revisited 275