ABSTRACT

Rarely has the history or philosophy of mathematics been written about by mathematicians, and the analysis of mathematical texts themselves has been an area almost entirely unexplored. Figures of Thought looks at ways in which mathematical works can be read as texts, examines their textual strategies and demonstrates that such readings provide a rich source of philosophical issues regarding mathematics: issues which traditional approaches to the history and philosophy of mathematics have neglected.
David Reed, a professional mathematician himself, offers the first sustained and critical attempt to find a consistent argument or narrative thread in mathematical texts. In doing so he develops new and fascinating interpretations of mathematicians' work throughout history, from an in-depth analysis of Euclid's Elements, to the mathematics of Descartes and right up to the work of contemporary mathematicians such as Grothendeick. He also traces the implications of this approach to the understanding of the history and development of mathematics.

part I|47 pages

The subject matter of geometry in Euclid, Descartes and Hilbert

chapter 1|18 pages

The opening of the Elements

part II|65 pages

The development of methods of measurement in Euclid, Dedekind and Kronecker

chapter 3|24 pages

The contexts of measurement

chapter 4|39 pages

Number theory in the nineteenth century

part III|42 pages

Mathematical wholes and the establishment of generality in Euclid, Weil and Grothendieck

chapter 5|24 pages

Types of wholes

chapter 6|14 pages

Generality in contemporary mathematics

chapter |5 pages

Conclusion