Did Georg Cantor influence Edmund Husserl? (Q1297050)
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scientific article; zbMATH DE number 1320696
| Language | Label | Description | Also known as |
|---|---|---|---|
| English | Did Georg Cantor influence Edmund Husserl? |
scientific article; zbMATH DE number 1320696 |
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Did Georg Cantor influence Edmund Husserl? (English)
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27 January 2000
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As part of her establishment of proper recognition in the philosophy of mathematics for Husserl, the authoress assesses the time from 1886 to 1900 when he and Cantor were both staff members at Halle University. Although very little documentary evidence of their contact survives, Cantor was a member of Husserl's Habilitation committee in 1891, and presumably they enjoyed valuable discussion of set theory. Cantor's naive use of (mental) abstraction from objects to form sets was refined by Husserl into a phenomenological conception much of his own making, focusing upon attention to objects. It became a Platonic idealism partly under Husserl's two other main influences at this time, the philosophers Franz Brentano and Hermann Lotze.
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philosophy of arithmetic
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philosophy of set theory
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phenomenology
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0.69507396
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0.6833246
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0.6772498
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