Abstract

The aim of this article is to highlight the inevitability of employing discreteness and continuity as primitive (indefinable) modes of explanation in the history of philosophy and mathematics. It embodies the general challenge to account for the coherence of what is unique. Gödel emphasises the coherence of ‘primitive concepts’. Greek philosophy already discovered the spatial whole and/or parts relation with its infinite divisibility. During and after the medieval era philosophers toggled between an atomistic appreciation of the continuum and its opposite, for example found in the thought of Leibniz who postulated his law of continuity (lex continui). The discovery of incommensurability (irrational numbers) by the Greeks caused the first foundational crisis of mathematics, as well as its geometrisation. Leibniz and Newton did not resolve the problems surrounding the limit concept and soon it induced the third foundational crisis of mathematics. It caused Frege and the ‘continuum theoreticians’ to assign priority to the continuum – discreteness is a catastrophe. Recently Smooth Infinitesimal Analysis appreciated what is ‘continuous’ as constituting ‘an unbroken or uninterrupted whole’. Intuitionistic mathematics once more proceeded from an emphasis on the whole and/or parts relation. In spite of alternating attempts to understand continuity exclusively, either in arithmetical or in spatial terms, the history of philosophy and mathematics undeniably confirms that the co-conditioning role of these two modes of explanation remains a constant element in reflections on continuity and discontinuity. (The role of continuity and discontinuity within the disciplines of physics and biology will be discussed in a separate article.)

Highlights

  • Corrigendum: Die wisselende rol van kontinuïteit en diskontinuïteit in die geskiedenis van die filosofie en die wiskunde

  • Hierdie fout is reggestel in die PDF-weergawe van die artikel

  • Dit beliggaam die algemene uitdaging om rekenskap van die samehang van iets wat uniek is te gee

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Summary

Oorspronklike Navorsing

Affiliation: 1Department of Philosophy, University of the Free State, South Africa. How to cite this article: Strauss, D.F.M., 2017, ‘Die wisselende rol van kontinuïteit en diskontinuïteit in die geskiedenis van die filosofie en die wiskunde’, Suid-Afrikaanse Tydskrif vir Natuurwetenskap en Tegnologie 36(1), a1388. https://doi.org/10.4102/ satnt.v36i1.1388. Dit sal blyk dat diskreetheid en kontinuïteit as unieke, maar wederkerig samehangende verklaringswyses die geskiedenis van die filosofie en die wiskunde in belangrike opsigte bepaal het.. Ons wil aantoon hoedanig die verhouding tussen kontinuïteit en diskontinuïteit histories betekenisvolle kontoere bied waarbinne die ontwikkeling van die filosofie en die natuurwetenskappe (in hierdie artikel toegespits op die wiskunde) verstaan kan word. Besinning oor die verhouding tussen (dis-)kontinuïteit (en diskreetheid) sal bykomend aan die lig bring dat dit ook ten nouste met hierdie ander klassieke probleme verweef is. Die belangrike onderliggende perspektief sluit egter aan by die bovermelde insig van Gödel, naamlik dat beide diskreetheid en kontinuïteit uiteindelik nie nader gedefinieer kan word nie, hoeseer die sin daarvan slegs tot openbaring kom in samehang met ander ongedefinieerde terme (primitives). Ons let egter allereers op enkele historiese aanknopingspunte alvorens ons aandag skenk aan die wyse waarop hierdie grondprobleem in die wiskunde na vore getree het

Historiese agtergrond
Van eindeloosheid na oneindige verdeelbaarheid
Atomisme in die geding
Die sirkelgang van diskreetheid en kontinuïteit
KonƟnue uitgebreidheid Ruimtefigure
Mededingende belange
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