Mexican Studies in the History and Philosophy of Science için kapak resmi
Mexican Studies in the History and Philosophy of Science
Başlık:
Mexican Studies in the History and Philosophy of Science
ISBN:
9789400901094
Edition:
1st ed. 1995.
Yayın Bilgileri:
Dordrecht : Springer Netherlands : Imprint: Springer, 1995.
Fiziksel Tanımlama:
292 p. online resource.
Series:
Boston Studies in the Philosophy and History of Science, 172
Contents:
A. Mexican Studies -- 1. Logic in Mexico With a Postscript: Eli de Gortari -- 2. Contributions of Santiago Ramírez to the History of the Colegio de Minería -- 3. Gabino Barreda and the Introduction of Darwinism in Mexico: Positivism and Evolution -- B. Social Studies -- 4. Psychoanalysis and Marxism -- 5. Functional Explanations in History -- 6. The History of Science: Internal or External? -- C. Natural Sciences -- 7. Genetic Mutation: The Development of the Concept and its Evolutionary Implications -- 8. Galileo's Revolution: The Use of Idealized Laws in Physics -- 9. Among Men, Closets to God -- D. Mathematics -- 10. The Philosophy and the Program of Hilbert -- 11. Some Logical Remarks Concerning the Contrunuum Problem -- 12. On the Relation of Hilbert's Second and Tenth Problems -- 13. Three Metaphysical Theses on Mathematical Philosophy -- 14. The Principles of Mathematics of Bertand Russell -- 15. Wittgenstein, On Mathematical Proof -- 16. To Show and to Prove -- 17. A return to Vienna -- List of Contributors.
Abstract:
For a North American seeking to know the Mexican mind, and especially the sciences today and in their recent development, a great light of genius is to be found in Mexico City in the late 17th century. Tbe genius is that of one who surely may be counted as the first Mexican philosopher of nature, a nun of the Order of Saint Jerome: Sor Juana Ines de la Cruz. Sor Juana must speak for herself, from her penetrating exercise of an independent mind within a political and religious formation which denigrated women and circumscribed reason itself. To understand this world of ours, to join in an enlightenment which would be both natural and inspired, Sor Juana clearly understood the requirements of leaming, observing, logic and reasoning. In darkness foundering Words fail the troubled mind. For who, I ask, can light me When Reason is blind? Even now, after the great steps toward liberation of women, and the substantial scientific contributions toward sheer empirical awareness of both the multiple orders ofNature and the subtle aesthetics ofindividual art and social harmony, we too in the earthly world of the 20th century must affirm what she affirmed.
Dil:
English