
Ad Infinitum... The Ghost in Turing's Machine: Taking God Out of Mathematics and Putting the Body Back In. An Essay in Corporeal Semiotics
by Brian Rotman
- Tytuł oryginalny
- Atomic Habits
- Język oryginału
- Angielski
- Liczba stron
- 320
- Wydawnictwo
- Avery
O tej książce
This ambitious work puts forward a new account of mathematics-as-language that challenges the coherence of the accepted idea of infinity and suggests a startlingly new conception of counting. The author questions the familiar, classical, interpretation of whole numbers held by mathematicians and scientists, and replaces it with an original and radical alternative―what the author calls non-Euclidean arithmetic. The author's entry point is an attack on the notion of the mathematical infinite in both its potential and actual forms, an attack organized around his claim that any interpretation of "endless" or "unlimited" iteration is ineradicably theological. Going further than critique of the overt metaphysics enshrined in the prevailing Platonist description of mathematics, he uncovers a covert theism, an appeal to a disembodied ghost, deep inside the mathematical community's understanding of counting.
Więcej od Brian Rotman
Becoming Beside Ourselves: The Alphabet, Ghosts, and Distributed Human Being
Brian Rotman
Inscribing Science: Scientific Texts and the Materiality of Communication
Lorraine Daston, Gillian Beer, Brian Rotman, Hans Ulrich Gumbrecht, Phillip Prodger, David Gugerli, Bernhard Siegert, Robin Rider, Friedrich Kitler
Mathematics as Sign: Writing, Imagining, Counting
Brian Rotman
Semiotics of zero - that is non-sense (SELECTION 21) (1991) ISBN: 4000040626 [Japanese Import]
Brian Rotman