This paper is focused on Cavaillès’ theory of science and his peculiar epistemology. In order to understand the position of Cavaillès concerning the becoming of mathematics, it is necessary to start from the way he utilizes the historical method inherited from Brunschvicg. In Cavaillès’ works, historical analysis is not reduced to a mere reconstruction of the past, but is regarded as an instrument to find the necessity that characterizes the movement of science. This movement is originated by the tensions between a necessary internal push and historical contingency, and it goes at its own pace, being determined by nothing else but the mathematics itself. Therefore, Cavaillès also states the failure of all foundational projects and affirms ...
I discuss the philosophy of François Dagognet as the inheritor of the French tradition in philosophy...
International audienceConcepts of both paradigm and thematization, through which Jean Cavaillès desc...
The article shows the strategic analogies, but also the differences between Bachelard and Canguilhem...
SUMMARY. — Is Jean Cavaillès an historian of Mathematics? History of Science for him does not reduce...
Summary. — In the text below I suggest an interpretation of Jean Cavaillès famous idea of urging the...
The author analyzes the French philosophy of concepts in the beginning of the 20th century proposing...
This paper is concerned with Cavaillès¿ account of ¿intuition¿ in mathematics. Cavaillès starts from...
Itard Jean. Cavaillès (Jean). Philosophie mathématique. In: Revue d'histoire des sciences et de leur...
International audienceThe crucial role which Bachelard attributed to mathematics within his his- tor...
Translation of “Mathematiques et formalisme” by Jean Cavailles and Georges Canguilhem; with introduc...
Summary. — When one examines the philosophical dispute over the foundations of mathematics around 19...
Before any historical study, it seems important to recall some general notions, studied in recent pu...
If the emergence of physics as a definite academic discipline was a heritage of the late nineteenth ...
SUMMARY. — No historical examples of logic can give the complete precise forms of scientific reasoni...
AbstractUsing the new historiography of science as a touch-stone, the historiography of mathematics ...
I discuss the philosophy of François Dagognet as the inheritor of the French tradition in philosophy...
International audienceConcepts of both paradigm and thematization, through which Jean Cavaillès desc...
The article shows the strategic analogies, but also the differences between Bachelard and Canguilhem...
SUMMARY. — Is Jean Cavaillès an historian of Mathematics? History of Science for him does not reduce...
Summary. — In the text below I suggest an interpretation of Jean Cavaillès famous idea of urging the...
The author analyzes the French philosophy of concepts in the beginning of the 20th century proposing...
This paper is concerned with Cavaillès¿ account of ¿intuition¿ in mathematics. Cavaillès starts from...
Itard Jean. Cavaillès (Jean). Philosophie mathématique. In: Revue d'histoire des sciences et de leur...
International audienceThe crucial role which Bachelard attributed to mathematics within his his- tor...
Translation of “Mathematiques et formalisme” by Jean Cavailles and Georges Canguilhem; with introduc...
Summary. — When one examines the philosophical dispute over the foundations of mathematics around 19...
Before any historical study, it seems important to recall some general notions, studied in recent pu...
If the emergence of physics as a definite academic discipline was a heritage of the late nineteenth ...
SUMMARY. — No historical examples of logic can give the complete precise forms of scientific reasoni...
AbstractUsing the new historiography of science as a touch-stone, the historiography of mathematics ...
I discuss the philosophy of François Dagognet as the inheritor of the French tradition in philosophy...
International audienceConcepts of both paradigm and thematization, through which Jean Cavaillès desc...
The article shows the strategic analogies, but also the differences between Bachelard and Canguilhem...