Published online by Cambridge University Press: 14 March 2022
The subject to which I invite your attention this evening is a very recent development in mathematics which happens to be of great importance to philosophy.
The question may perhaps be raised why a terrifying topic like mathematics as introduced into an Institute of Philosophy. There are two answers to this question. In the first place my talk this evening will not be a “mathematical lecture” in any ordinary sense of the term, and no mathematical knowledge whatsoever will be presupposed. In the second place, even if it were to be a mathematical lecture, such an audience as is here assembled tonight would find nothing terrifying in the prospect.
Outline of an illustrated lecture delivered at Brunswick, Maine, April 13, 1937, as part of the Institute of Philosophy held from April 6th to 16th at Bowdoin College.
2 In technical mathematical literature, however, many writers use the word “axiom” in the sense here reserved for “postulate.”