库尔特-哥德尔对埃德蒙-胡塞尔的解读:从现象学的角度探寻数学的基础

Abdullah Başaran
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引用次数: 0

摘要

伟大的逻辑学家和数学家库尔特-哥德尔(Kurt Gödel)在其晚期著作中,将注意力集中在哲学问题上,如集合论的含义、语言的语法和哲学、客观性和相对性、上帝存在的本体论证明,以及作为精确方法的现象学。本文将探讨哥德尔如何解读他所处时代的(逻辑和数学)哲学,以及他为何将注意力转向胡塞尔的现象学来描述数学基础。首先,哥德尔运用了胡塞尔对世界观哲学(Weltanschauung)和作为严谨科学的哲学的重要区分:根据 "世界观 "哲学,时间的精神是不断变化的,因此所讨论的思想和尝试的目标都是暂时的,不是为了永恒的真理,而是为了自身的完善;而作为严谨科学的哲学则是超时间的,因此其目的是发现绝对和永恒的价值。至于他所处时代的世界观,哥德尔认为哲学和数学的发展倾向于怀疑论、悲观主义和实证主义。例如,集合论的反传统动摇了数学和逻辑学的基础。哥德尔在他的不完备性定理中也使用了这些悖论,以证明在一个体系中,有些语句既无法证明,也无法反驳。这也意味着算术没有资格证明自身的一致性。然而,哥德尔并没有由此得出数学和逻辑学虚无主义的结论:集合论的这些对立并不 "必然 "导致逻辑实证主义,也不会导致唯物主义或任何悲观的知识论。不完备性定理断言,在算术本身的微积分中,有一些算术命题是真的,但既不可证,也不可证,因此算术本质上是不完备的。然而,与阿尔弗雷德-塔尔斯基(Alfred Tarski)的病态观点不同,哥德尔认为,我们需要改变我们的方法,找到新的模式来描述指向数学世界不可恢复的现实的反义词。因此,哥德尔并没有遵循他那个时代的世界观哲学的任何变体,要么试图将数学现实还原为数学证明以摆脱对立,要么试图用一个封闭的形式系统来拯救一个完整的真理体系,这两种世界观哲学都没有提出一种现实的方法。在这种情况下,哥德尔发现现象学的任务类似于他所追求的数学基础的系统框架。在哥德尔看来,胡塞尔的现象学增殖了(数学)本质的直觉,并澄清了无法定义的概念(如集合论的反义)的意义。哥德尔认为,将现象学还原应用于数学世界的客观现实,就能获得(数学和逻辑)概念本质特征的清晰经验现实。简而言之,哥德尔在胡塞尔的现象学中发现了与他的数学现实主义方式相对应的,是一种彻底指定的方法,让我们再次回到数学本质。
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Kurt Gödel’in Edmund Husserl Okuması: Matematiğin Temellerini Fenomenolojinin Işığında Aramak
In his later works, the great logician and mathematician Kurt Gödel concentrates his focus on the philosophical problems such as the implications of set theory, the grammar and philosophy of language, objectivity and relativity, the ontological proof of God’s existence, and phenomenology as an exact method. This essay explores how Gödel reads the philosophy (of logic and mathematics) of his time and why he turns his attention to Husserl’s phenomenology for describing the foundations of mathematics. To begin with, Gödel employs Husserl’s significant distinction between Weltanschauung (worldview) philosophy and philosophy as rigorous science: According to the Weltanschauung philosophy, the spirit of time constantly changes so that the ideas discussed and goals attempted are meant to be temporal, and not for the sake of eternal truths, but for that of their own perfection; philosophy as rigorous science, on the other hand, is supratemporal so that its aim is to discover absolute and timeless values. As for the worldview of his time, Gödel sees the development of philosophy and mathematics leaned toward skepticism, pessimism, and positivism. The antinomies of set theory, for instance shaked the grounds on which mathematics and logic are founded. Gödel, too, uses these paradoxes in his incompleteness theorems in order to prove that there are some statements which can neither be proved nor disproved within a system. That also means that arithmetic is not eligible to prove its own consistency. From this, however, Gödel does not come to a conclusion for a nihilism in mathematics and logic: These mere antinomies of set theory do not “necessarily” lead us to logical positivism, and neither to such a materialism, nor to any kind of pessimistic theory of knowledge. The incompleteness theorems assert that there are arithmetical propositions that are true but neither provable nor unprovable within its own calculus, so that arithmetic is intrinsically incomplete. However, instead of Alfred Tarski’s pathological view of examining the detections within the faulty system and then reforming the system all together, Gödel holds that we need to change our methods to find new patterns that describe the antinomies pointing to the unrecoverable reality of the mathematical world. Thus, Gödel does not follow any variation of the Weltanschauung philosophy of his time, either attempting to reduce mathematical realities to mathematical proofs in order to get rid of antinomies, or endeavoring to rescue a complete system of truths by a closed formal system, both Weltanschauung philosophies fail to set forth a realistic method. In this context, Gödel finds the task of phenomenology analogous to what he pursues in terms of a systematic framework for the foundations of mathematics. Husserl’s phenomenology, in Gödel’s account, proliferates the intuition of (mathematical) essences and provides a clarification of meaning of undefinable concepts, such as the antinomies of set theory. Applying the phenomenological reduction to the objective reality of the mathematical world, Gödel believes one obtains a clear experiential reality of the essential characteristics of (mathematical and logical) concepts. Briefly put, what Gödel finds in Husserl’s phenomenology that corresponds to his way of mathematical realism is a thoroughly designated method giving us mathematical essences back again.
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