Standard

Cauchy, Infinitesimals and ghosts of departed quantifiers. / Bair, J.; Błaszczyk, P.; Ely, R. и др.

в: Matematychni Studii, Том 47, № 2, 2017, стр. 115-144.

Результаты исследований: Научные публикации в периодических изданияхстатьяРецензирование

Harvard

Bair, J, Błaszczyk, P, Ely, R, Henry, V, Kanovei, V, Katz, KU, Katz, MG, Kudryk, T, Kutateladze, SS, McGaffey, T, Mormann, T, Schaps, DM & Sherry, D 2017, 'Cauchy, Infinitesimals and ghosts of departed quantifiers', Matematychni Studii, Том. 47, № 2, стр. 115-144. https://doi.org/10.15330/ms.47.2.115-144

APA

Bair, J., Błaszczyk, P., Ely, R., Henry, V., Kanovei, V., Katz, K. U., Katz, M. G., Kudryk, T., Kutateladze, S. S., McGaffey, T., Mormann, T., Schaps, D. M., & Sherry, D. (2017). Cauchy, Infinitesimals and ghosts of departed quantifiers. Matematychni Studii, 47(2), 115-144. https://doi.org/10.15330/ms.47.2.115-144

Vancouver

Bair J, Błaszczyk P, Ely R, Henry V, Kanovei V, Katz KU и др. Cauchy, Infinitesimals and ghosts of departed quantifiers. Matematychni Studii. 2017;47(2):115-144. doi: 10.15330/ms.47.2.115-144

Author

Bair, J. ; Błaszczyk, P. ; Ely, R. и др. / Cauchy, Infinitesimals and ghosts of departed quantifiers. в: Matematychni Studii. 2017 ; Том 47, № 2. стр. 115-144.

BibTeX

@article{2fbf2b5bf7d844f5b45e6872941b59be,
title = "Cauchy, Infinitesimals and ghosts of departed quantifiers",
abstract = "Procedures relying on infinitesimals in Leibniz, Euler and Cauchy have been interpreted in both a Weierstrassian and Robinson's frameworks. The latter provides closer proxies for the procedures of the classical masters. Thus, Leibniz's distinction between assignable and inassignable numbers finds a proxy in the distinction between standard and nonstandard numbers in Robinson's framework, while Leibniz's law of homogeneity with the implied notion of equality up to negligible terms finds a mathematical formalisation in terms of standard part. It is hard to provide parallel formalisations in a Weierstrassian framework but scholars since Ishiguro have engaged in a quest for ghosts of departed quantifiers to provide a Weierstrassian account for Leibniz's infinitesimals. Euler similarly had notions of equality up to negligible terms, of which he distinguished two types: geometric and arithmetic. Euler routinely used product decompositions into a specific infinite number of factors, and used the binomial formula with an infinite exponent. Such procedures have immediate hyperfinite analogues in Robinson's framework, while in a Weierstrassian framework they can only be reinterpreted by means of paraphrases departing significantly from Euler's own presentation. Cauchy gives lucid definitions of continuity in terms of infinitesimals that find ready formalisations in Robinson's framework but scholars working in a Weierstrassian framework bend over backwards either to claim that Cauchy was vague or to engage in a quest for ghosts of departed quantifiers in his work. Cauchy's procedures in the context of his 1853 sum theorem (for series of continuous functions) are more readily understood from the viewpoint of Robinson's framework, where one can exploit tools such as the pointwise definition of the concept of uniform convergence. As case studies, we analyze the approaches of Craig Fraser and Jesper L{\"u}tzen to Cauchy's contributions to infinitesimal analysis, as well as Fraser's approach toward Leibniz's theoretical strategy in dealing with infinitesimals. The insights by philosophers Ian Hacking and others into the important roles of contextuality and contingency tend to undermine Fraser's interpretive.",
keywords = "Butterfly model, Cauchy, Historiography, Infinitesimal, Latin model, Law of continuity, Leibniz, Ontology, Practice",
author = "J. Bair and P. B{\l}aszczyk and R. Ely and V. Henry and V. Kanovei and Katz, {K. U.} and Katz, {M. G.} and T. Kudryk and Kutateladze, {S. S.} and T. McGaffey and T. Mormann and Schaps, {D. M.} and D. Sherry",
note = "Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} J. Bair, P. B{\l}aszczyk, R. Ely, V. Henry, V. Kanovei, K. U. Katz..., 2017.",
year = "2017",
doi = "10.15330/ms.47.2.115-144",
language = "English",
volume = "47",
pages = "115--144",
journal = "Matematychni Studii",
issn = "1027-4634",
publisher = "VNTL Publishers",
number = "2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Cauchy, Infinitesimals and ghosts of departed quantifiers

AU - Bair, J.

AU - Błaszczyk, P.

AU - Ely, R.

AU - Henry, V.

AU - Kanovei, V.

AU - Katz, K. U.

AU - Katz, M. G.

AU - Kudryk, T.

AU - Kutateladze, S. S.

AU - McGaffey, T.

AU - Mormann, T.

AU - Schaps, D. M.

AU - Sherry, D.

N1 - Publisher Copyright: © J. Bair, P. Błaszczyk, R. Ely, V. Henry, V. Kanovei, K. U. Katz..., 2017.

PY - 2017

Y1 - 2017

N2 - Procedures relying on infinitesimals in Leibniz, Euler and Cauchy have been interpreted in both a Weierstrassian and Robinson's frameworks. The latter provides closer proxies for the procedures of the classical masters. Thus, Leibniz's distinction between assignable and inassignable numbers finds a proxy in the distinction between standard and nonstandard numbers in Robinson's framework, while Leibniz's law of homogeneity with the implied notion of equality up to negligible terms finds a mathematical formalisation in terms of standard part. It is hard to provide parallel formalisations in a Weierstrassian framework but scholars since Ishiguro have engaged in a quest for ghosts of departed quantifiers to provide a Weierstrassian account for Leibniz's infinitesimals. Euler similarly had notions of equality up to negligible terms, of which he distinguished two types: geometric and arithmetic. Euler routinely used product decompositions into a specific infinite number of factors, and used the binomial formula with an infinite exponent. Such procedures have immediate hyperfinite analogues in Robinson's framework, while in a Weierstrassian framework they can only be reinterpreted by means of paraphrases departing significantly from Euler's own presentation. Cauchy gives lucid definitions of continuity in terms of infinitesimals that find ready formalisations in Robinson's framework but scholars working in a Weierstrassian framework bend over backwards either to claim that Cauchy was vague or to engage in a quest for ghosts of departed quantifiers in his work. Cauchy's procedures in the context of his 1853 sum theorem (for series of continuous functions) are more readily understood from the viewpoint of Robinson's framework, where one can exploit tools such as the pointwise definition of the concept of uniform convergence. As case studies, we analyze the approaches of Craig Fraser and Jesper Lützen to Cauchy's contributions to infinitesimal analysis, as well as Fraser's approach toward Leibniz's theoretical strategy in dealing with infinitesimals. The insights by philosophers Ian Hacking and others into the important roles of contextuality and contingency tend to undermine Fraser's interpretive.

AB - Procedures relying on infinitesimals in Leibniz, Euler and Cauchy have been interpreted in both a Weierstrassian and Robinson's frameworks. The latter provides closer proxies for the procedures of the classical masters. Thus, Leibniz's distinction between assignable and inassignable numbers finds a proxy in the distinction between standard and nonstandard numbers in Robinson's framework, while Leibniz's law of homogeneity with the implied notion of equality up to negligible terms finds a mathematical formalisation in terms of standard part. It is hard to provide parallel formalisations in a Weierstrassian framework but scholars since Ishiguro have engaged in a quest for ghosts of departed quantifiers to provide a Weierstrassian account for Leibniz's infinitesimals. Euler similarly had notions of equality up to negligible terms, of which he distinguished two types: geometric and arithmetic. Euler routinely used product decompositions into a specific infinite number of factors, and used the binomial formula with an infinite exponent. Such procedures have immediate hyperfinite analogues in Robinson's framework, while in a Weierstrassian framework they can only be reinterpreted by means of paraphrases departing significantly from Euler's own presentation. Cauchy gives lucid definitions of continuity in terms of infinitesimals that find ready formalisations in Robinson's framework but scholars working in a Weierstrassian framework bend over backwards either to claim that Cauchy was vague or to engage in a quest for ghosts of departed quantifiers in his work. Cauchy's procedures in the context of his 1853 sum theorem (for series of continuous functions) are more readily understood from the viewpoint of Robinson's framework, where one can exploit tools such as the pointwise definition of the concept of uniform convergence. As case studies, we analyze the approaches of Craig Fraser and Jesper Lützen to Cauchy's contributions to infinitesimal analysis, as well as Fraser's approach toward Leibniz's theoretical strategy in dealing with infinitesimals. The insights by philosophers Ian Hacking and others into the important roles of contextuality and contingency tend to undermine Fraser's interpretive.

KW - Butterfly model

KW - Cauchy

KW - Historiography

KW - Infinitesimal

KW - Latin model

KW - Law of continuity

KW - Leibniz

KW - Ontology

KW - Practice

UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85035096937&partnerID=8YFLogxK

U2 - 10.15330/ms.47.2.115-144

DO - 10.15330/ms.47.2.115-144

M3 - Article

AN - SCOPUS:85035096937

VL - 47

SP - 115

EP - 144

JO - Matematychni Studii

JF - Matematychni Studii

SN - 1027-4634

IS - 2

ER -

ID: 9049180