
Publication details
Publisher: Birkhäuser
Place: Basel
Year: 2017
Pages: 97-114
ISBN (Hardback): 9783319612300
Full citation:
, "Reuben Hersh on the growth of mathematical knowledge", in: Humanizing mathematics and its philosophy, Basel, Birkhäuser, 2017


Reuben Hersh on the growth of mathematical knowledge
Kant, geometry, and number theory
pp. 97-114
in: Bharath Sriraman (ed), Humanizing mathematics and its philosophy, Basel, Birkhäuser, 2017Abstract
In his reflective writings about mathematics, Reuben Hersh has consistently championed a philosophy of mathematical practice. He argues that if we pay close attention to what mathematicians really do in their research, as they extend mathematical knowledge at the frontier between the known and the conjectured, we see that their work does not only involve deductive reasoning. It also includes plausible reasoning, "analytic" reasoning upward that seeks the conditions of the solvability of problems and the conditions of the intelligibility of mathematical things. We use, he argues, "our mental models of mathematical entities, which are culturally controlled to be mutually congruent within the research community. These socially controlled mental models provide the much-desired 'semantics' of mathematical reasoning" (Hersh 2014b, p. 127). Every active mathematician is familiar with a large swathe of established mathematics, "an intricately interconnected web of mutually supporting concepts, which are connected both by plausible and by deductive reasoning," that include "concepts, algorithms, theories, axiom systems, examples, conjectures and open problems," and models and applications. Thus, "the body of established mathematics is not a fixed or static set of statements. The new and recent part is in transition" (Ibid, pp. 131–2).
Cited authors
Publication details
Publisher: Birkhäuser
Place: Basel
Year: 2017
Pages: 97-114
ISBN (Hardback): 9783319612300
Full citation:
, "Reuben Hersh on the growth of mathematical knowledge", in: Humanizing mathematics and its philosophy, Basel, Birkhäuser, 2017