5 resultados para Gödel, Kurt
em Université de Montréal, Canada
Resumo:
La crise des fondements n’a pas affecté les fondements arithmétiques du constructivisme de Kronecker, Bien plutôt, c’est le finitisme kroneckerien de la théorie de l’arithmétique générale ou polynomiale qui a permis à Hilbert de surmonter la crise des fondements ensemblistes et qui a poussé Gödel, inspiré par Hilbert, à proposer une extension du point de vue finitiste pour obtenir une preuve constructive de la consistance de l’arithmétique dans son interprétation fonctionnelle « Dialectica ».
Resumo:
Le sujet visé par cette dissertation est la logique ordinale de Turing. Nous nous référons au texte original de Turing «Systems of logic based on ordinals» (Turing [1939]), la thèse que Turing rédigea à Princeton sous la direction du professeur Alonzo Church. Le principe d’une logique ordinale consiste à surmonter localement l’incomplétude gödelienne pour l’arithmétique par le biais de progressions d’axiomes récursivement consistantes. Étant donné son importance considérable pour la théorie de la calculabilité et les fondements des mathématiques, cette recherche méconnue de Turing mérite une attention particulière. Nous retraçons ici le projet d’une logique ordinale, de ses origines dans le théorème d’incomplétude de Gödel jusqu'à ses avancées dans les développements de la théorie de la calculabilité. Nous concluons par une discussion philosophique sur les fondements des mathématiques en fonction d’un point de vue finitiste.
Resumo:
La version intégrale de cette thèse est disponible uniquement pour consultation individuelle à la Bibliothèque de musique de l’Université de Montréal (www.bib.umontreal.ca/MU).
Resumo:
This thesis is concerned with the interaction between literature and abstract thought. More specifically, it studies the epistemological charge of the literary, the type of knowledge that is carried by elements proper to fictional narratives into different disciplines. By concentrating on two different theoretical methods, the creation of thought experiments and the framing of possible worlds, methods which were elaborated and are still used today in spheres as varied as modal logics, analytic philosophy and physics, and by following their reinsertion within literary theory, the research develops the theory that both thought experiments and possible worlds are in fact short narrative stories that inform knowledge through literary means. By using two novels, Abbott’s Flatland and Vonnegut’s The Sirens of Titan, that describe extra-dimensional existence in radically different ways, respectively as a phenomenologically unknowable space and as an outward perspective on time, it becomes clear that literature is constitutive of the way in which worlds, fictive, real or otherwise, are constructed and understood. Thus dimensions, established through extensional analogies as either experimental knowledge or modal possibility for a given world, generate new directions for thought, which can then take part in the inductive/deductive process of scientia. By contrasting the dimensions of narrative with the way that dimensions were historically constituted, the research also establishes that the literary opens up an infinite potential of abstract space-time domains, defined by their specific rules and limits, and that these different experimental folds are themselves partaking in a dimensional process responsible for new forms of understanding. Over against science fiction literary theories of speculation that posit an equation between the fictive and the real, this thesis examines the complex structure of many overlapping possibilities that can organise themselves around larger compossible wholes, thus offering a theory of reading that is both non-mimetic and non-causal. It consequently examines the a dynamic process whereby literature is always reconceived through possibilities actualised by reading while never defining how the reader will ultimately understand the overarching structure. In this context, the thesis argues that a causal story can be construed out of any one interaction with a given narrative—underscoring, for example, the divinatory strength of a particular vision of the future—even as this narrative represents only a fraction of the potential knowledge of any particular literary text. Ultimately, the study concludes by tracing out how novel comprehensions of the literary, framed by the material conditions of their own space and time, endlessly renew themselves through multiple interactions, generating analogies and speculations that facilitate the creation of new knowledge.