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(2016) Early analytic philosophy, Dordrecht, Springer.

Frege and the Aristotelian model of science

Danielle Macbeth

pp. 31-48

Although profoundly influential for essentially the whole of philosophy's twenty-five hundred year history, the model of a science that is outlined in Aristotle's Posterior Analytics has recently been abandoned on grounds that developments in mathematics and logic over the last century or so have rendered it obsolete. Nor has anything emerged to take its place. As things stand we have not even the outlines of an adequate understanding of the rationality of mathematics as a scientific practice. It seems reasonable, in light of this lacuna, to return again to Frege—who was at once one of the last great defenders of the model and a key figure in the very developments that have been taken to spell its demise—in hopes of finding a way forward. What we find when we do is that although Frege remains true to the spirit of the model, he also modifies it in very fundamental ways. So modified, I will suggest, the model continues to provide a viable and compelling image of scientific rationality by showing, in broad outline, how we achieve, and maintain, cognitive control in our mathematical investigations.

Publication details

DOI: 10.1007/978-3-319-24214-9_3

Full citation:

Macbeth, D. (2016)., Frege and the Aristotelian model of science, in S. Costreie (ed.), Early analytic philosophy, Dordrecht, Springer, pp. 31-48.

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