000 01851nam a2200229 a 4500
001 nice12345678
003 Monogr.mrc
005 20200111182500.0
008 16-May-17s0000 Pria grp 000 0 eng
020 _c0
082 0 0 _aN75.1KI
_bB778
100 _aBrittan, Gordon G
245 _aKant`s Theory of Science
260 _aPrinceton
_bPrinceton University Press
_c0000
300 _a215p
500 _aincludes index and biblioraphy
505 2 _athe anti-reductionist Kant reductionism characterized reductionism rejected: "the Copemican Revolution" the analytic/synthetic distinction and really possible worlds presuppositions and truth values Kant`s philosophy of mathematics the reduction of mathematics to logic: the Frege-Russell program the Beth-Hintikka reconstruction the Lambert-Parsons reconstruction constructibility, pure intuitions, and objective reality geometry, Euclidean and non-Euclidean the analyticity of geometry geometry and space space and spatiality the axioms of intuition extensive magnitudes the metric of space and time motion and space objectivity concepts Kant`s argument revisited Kant and Newton Hume`s challenge Kant`s response the "objectivity" of Newtonian physics matter, nature, and Newton the law of universal gravitation the substance of matter substances and space impenetrability and the two "grand hypotheses" matter and mass time and causality events and causes the causal theory of time causality and objectivity "weak" and "strong" causality the problem of induction and its "solution" Hume `s problem "grue"-type predicates Kant`s "solution" objects and causes Hume revisited Kant and quantum mechanics
700 1 _aBrittan, Gordon G
902 _bSLR
942 _cBK
999 _c3128
_d3128