Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Introduction
- 1 Mathematics in and behind Russell’s Logicism, and Its Reception
- 2 Russell’s Philosophical Background
- 3 Russell and Moore, 1898-1905
- 4 Russell and Frege
- 5 Bertrand Russell’s Logicism
- 6 The Theory of Descriptions
- 7 Russell’s Substitutional Theory
- 8 The Theory of Types
- 9 Russell’s Method of Analysis
- 10 Russell’s Neutral Monism
- 11 The Metaphysics of Logical Atomism
- 12 Russell’s Structuralism and the Absolute Description of the World
- 13 From Knowledge by Acquaintance to Knowledge by Causation
- 14 Russell, Experience, and the Roots of Science
- 15 Bertrand Russell
- Selective Bibliography
- Index
- Series list
7 - Russell’s Substitutional Theory
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 May 2006
- Frontmatter
- Introduction
- 1 Mathematics in and behind Russell’s Logicism, and Its Reception
- 2 Russell’s Philosophical Background
- 3 Russell and Moore, 1898-1905
- 4 Russell and Frege
- 5 Bertrand Russell’s Logicism
- 6 The Theory of Descriptions
- 7 Russell’s Substitutional Theory
- 8 The Theory of Types
- 9 Russell’s Method of Analysis
- 10 Russell’s Neutral Monism
- 11 The Metaphysics of Logical Atomism
- 12 Russell’s Structuralism and the Absolute Description of the World
- 13 From Knowledge by Acquaintance to Knowledge by Causation
- 14 Russell, Experience, and the Roots of Science
- 15 Bertrand Russell
- Selective Bibliography
- Index
- Series list
Summary
introduction
In his 1893 Grundgesetze der Arithmetik Frege sought to demonstrate a thesis which has come to be called Logicism. Frege maintained that there are no uniquely arithmetic intuitions that ground mathematical induction and the foundational principles of arithmetic. Couched within a proper conceptual analysis of cardinal number, arithmetic truths will be seen to be truths of the science of logic. Frege set out a formal system - a characteristica universalis - after Leibniz, whose formation rules and transformation (inference) rules were explicit and, he thought, clearly within the domain of the science of logic. Confident that no nonlogical intuitions could seep into such a tightly articulated system, Frege endeavored to demonstrate logicism by deducing the principle of mathematical induction and foundational theorems for arithmetic.
In his 1903 The Principles of Mathematics, Russell set out a doctrine of Logicism according to which there are no special intuitions unique to the branches of non-applied mathematics. All the truths of non-applied mathematics are truths of the science of logic. Russell embraced this more encompassing form of logicism because, unlike Frege, he accepted the arithmetization of all of non-applied mathematics, including Geometry and Rational Dynamics.
Both Frege and Russell regarded logic as itself a science. Frege refrained from calling it a synthetic a priori science so as to mark his departure from the notion of pure empirical intuition (anschauung) set forth in Kant’s 1781 Critique of Pure Reason. In Frege’s view, Kant’s transcendental argument for a form of pure empirical (aesthetic) intuition that grounds the synthetic a priori truths of arithmetic is unwarranted. Russell concurred, but spoke unabashedly of a purely logical intuition grounding our knowledge of logical truths. Russell wrote that Kant “never doubted for a moment that the propositions of logic are analytic, whereas he rightly perceived that those of mathematics are synthetic . . . It has since appeared that logic is just as synthetic . . .” (POM, p. 457).
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The Cambridge Companion to Bertrand Russell , pp. 241 - 285Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2003
- 5
- Cited by