Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Contributors
- Foreword
- Preface
- Acknowledgments
- Short Biography of Kurt Gödel
- I Historical Context: Gödel's Contributions and Accomplishments
- Gödel's Legacy: A Historical Perspective
- 3 The Reception of Gödel's 1931 Incompletability Theorems by Mathematicians, and Some Logicians, to the Early 1960s
- 4 “Dozent Gödel Will Not Lecture”
- 5 Gödel's Thesis: An Appreciation
- 6 Lieber Herr Bernays! Lieber Herr Gödel! Gödel on Finitism, Constructivity, and Hilbert's Program
- The Past and Future of Computation
- Gödelian Cosmology
- II A Wider Vision: The Interdisciplinary, Philosophical, and Theological Implications of Gödel's Work
- Gödel and the Mathematics of Philosophy
- Gödel and Philosophical Theology
- Gödel and the Human Mind
- III New Frontiers: Beyond Gödel's Work in Mathematics and Symbolic Logic
- The Realm of Set Theory
- Gödel and the Higher Infinite
- Gödel and Computer Science
- Index
6 - Lieber Herr Bernays! Lieber Herr Gödel! Gödel on Finitism, Constructivity, and Hilbert's Program
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 07 September 2011
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Contributors
- Foreword
- Preface
- Acknowledgments
- Short Biography of Kurt Gödel
- I Historical Context: Gödel's Contributions and Accomplishments
- Gödel's Legacy: A Historical Perspective
- 3 The Reception of Gödel's 1931 Incompletability Theorems by Mathematicians, and Some Logicians, to the Early 1960s
- 4 “Dozent Gödel Will Not Lecture”
- 5 Gödel's Thesis: An Appreciation
- 6 Lieber Herr Bernays! Lieber Herr Gödel! Gödel on Finitism, Constructivity, and Hilbert's Program
- The Past and Future of Computation
- Gödelian Cosmology
- II A Wider Vision: The Interdisciplinary, Philosophical, and Theological Implications of Gödel's Work
- Gödel and the Mathematics of Philosophy
- Gödel and Philosophical Theology
- Gödel and the Human Mind
- III New Frontiers: Beyond Gödel's Work in Mathematics and Symbolic Logic
- The Realm of Set Theory
- Gödel and the Higher Infinite
- Gödel and Computer Science
- Index
Summary
Gödel, Bernays, and Hilbert
The correspondence between Paul Bernays and Kurt Gödel is one of the most extensive in the two volumes of Gödel's Collected Works (1986–2003) devoted to his letters of (primarily) scientific, philosophical, and historical interest. Ranging from 1930 to 1975, except for one long break, this correspondence engages a rich body of logical and philosophical issues, including the incompleteness theorems, finitism, constructivity, set theory, the philosophy of mathematics, and post-Kantian philosophy. In addition, Gödel's side of the exchange includes his thoughts on many topics that are not expressed elsewhere and testify to the lifelong warm, personal relationship that he shared with Bernays. I have given a detailed synopsis of the Bernays-Gödel correspondence, with explanatory background, in my introductory note to it in CW IV (pp. 41–79). My purpose here is to focus on only one group of interrelated topics from these exchanges, namely, the light that this correspondence – together with assorted published and unpublished articles and lectures by Gödel – throws on his perennial preoccupations with the limits of finitism, its relations to constructivity, and the significance of his incompleteness theorems for Hilbert's program. In that connection, this piece has an important subtext, namely, the shadow of Hilbert that loomed over Gödel from the beginning to the end of his career.
Let me explain. Hilbert and Ackermann (1928) posed the fundamental problem of the completeness of the first-order predicate calculus in their logic text; Gödel (1929) settled that question in the affirmative in his dissertation a year later.
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- Kurt Gödel and the Foundations of MathematicsHorizons of Truth, pp. 111 - 134Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2011
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