Introduction
1: Divisibility or indivisibility: the notion of continuity from
the Presocratics to Aristotle, Barbara Sattler
2: Contiguity, continuity and continuous change: Alexander of
Aphrodisias on Aristotle, Orna Harari
3: Infinity and continuity: Thomas Bradwardine and his
contemporaries, Edith Dudley Sylla
4: Continuous extension and indivisibles in Galileo, Samuel
Levey
5: The indivisibles of the continuum: seventeenth- century
adventures in infinitesimal mathematics, Douglas. M Jesseph
6: The continuum, the infinitely small, and the law of conti- nuity
in Leibniz, Samuel Levey
7: Continuity and intuition in 18th century analysis and in Kant,
Daniel Sutherland
8: Bolzano on continuity, P. Rusnock
9: Cantor and continuity, Akihiro Kanamori
10: Dedekind on continuity, Emmylou Haner and Dirk Schlimm
11: What is a number?: continua, magnitudes, quantities, Charles
McCarty
12: Continuity and intuitionism, Charles McCarty
13: The Peircean continuum, Francisco Vargas and Matthew E.
Moore
14: Points as higher-order constructs: Whitehead's method of
extensive abstraction, Achille C. Varzi
15: The predicative conception of the continuum, Peter Koellner
16: Point-free continuum, Giangiacomo Gerla
17: Intuitionistic/constructive accounts of the continuum today,
John L. Bell
18: Contemporary innitesimalist theories of continua and their late
19th and early 20th century forerunners, Philip Ehrlich
Stewart Shapiro received an M.A. in mathematics in 1975, and a
Ph.D. in philosophy in 1978, both from the State University of New
York at Buffalo. He is currently the O'Donnell Professor of
Philosophy at The Ohio State University, and serves as
Distinguished Visiting Professor at the University of Connecticut,
and Presidential Fellow at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. He
has contributed to the philosophy of mathematics, philosophy of
language, logic, and
philosophy of logic.
Geoffrey Hellman received his BA and PhD from Harvard (PhD 1973).
He has published widely in philosophy of quantum mechanics and
philosophy of mathematics, developing a modal-structural
interpretation of mathematics. He has also worked on predicative
foundations of arithmetic (with Solomon Feferman) and pluralism in
mathematics (with John L. Bell). In 2007 he was elected to the
American Academy of Arts and Sciences. He and Stewart Shapiro
co-authored Varieties of Continua: from Regions to
Points and Back (Oxford, 2018).
Mathematicians and philosophers alike will appreciate this
carefully articulated study of mereology, rigorously detailed and
beautifully presented.
*R. L. Pour, CHOICE*
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