On the Nature of Mathematical Truth
By CARL G. HEMPEL
Published in American Mathematical Monthly 52, 1945.
Reprinted in Readings in Philosophical Analysis, ed. H. Feigl and
W. Sellars (New
York: Appleton-Century-Crofts, 1949). Reprinted in The World of Mathematics,
vol. III, ed. James R. Newman (New York: Simon and Shuster, 1956).
Transcribed into hypertext by Andrew Chrucky, Feb. 4, 2001.
From: http://www.ditext.com/hempel/math-frame.html
1. THE PROBLEM
It is a basic principle of scientific inquiry that no proposition and no
theory is to be accepted without adequate grounds. In empirical science, which
includes both the natural and the social sciences,
Empirical Science
|
Natural Sciences |
Social Sciences |
the grounds for the acceptance of a theory consist in the agreement of
predictions based on the theory with empirical evidence obtained either by
experiment or by systematic observation. But what are the grounds which sanction
the acceptance of mathematics? That is the question I propose to discuss in the
present paper. For reasons which will become clear subsequently, I shall use the
term "mathematics" here to refer to arithmetic, algebra, and analysis -- to the
exclusion, in particular, of geometry.
2. ARE THE PROPOSITIONS OF MATHEMATICS SELF-EVIDENT
TRUTHS?
One of the several answers which have been given to our problem asserts that
the truths of mathematics, in contradistinction to the hypotheses of empirical
science, require neither factual evidence nor any other justification because
they are "self-evident." This view, however, which ultimately relegates
decisions as to mathematical truth to a feeling of self-evidence, encounters
various difficulties. First of all, many mathematical theorems are so hard to
establish that even to the specialist in the particular field they appear as
anything but self-evident. Secondly, it is well known that some of the most
interesting results of mathematics -- especially in such fields as abstract set
theory and topology -- run counter to deeply ingrained intuitions and the
customary kind of feeling of self-evidence. Thirdly, the existence of
mathematical conjectures such as those of Goldbach and of Fermat, which are
quite elementary in content and yet undecided up to this day, certainly shows
that not all mathematical truths can be self-evident. And finally, even if
self-evidence were attributed only to the basic postulates of mathematics, from
which all other mathematical propositions can be deduced, it would be pertinent
to remark that judgments as to what may be considered as self-evident are
subjective; they may vary from person to person and certainly cannot constitute
an adequate basis for decisions as to the objective validity of mathematical
propositions.
3. IS MATHEMATICS THE MOST GENERAL EMPIRICAL SCIENCE?
According to another view, advocated especially by John Stuart Mill,
mathematics is itself an empirical science which differs from the other branches
such as astronomy, physics, chemistry, etc., mainly in two respects: its subject
matter is more general than that of any other field of scientific research, and
its propositions have been tested and confirmed to a greater extent than those
of even the most firmly established sections of astronomy or physics. Indeed,
according to this view, the degree to which the laws of mathematics have been
borne out by the past experiences of mankind is so overwhelming that --
unjustifiably -- we have come to think of mathematical theorems as qualitatively
different from the well confirmed hypotheses or theories of other branches of
science: we consider them as certain, while other theories are thought of as at
best "very probable" or very highly confirmed.
But this view, too, is open to serious objections. From a hypothesis which is
empirical in character -- such as, for example, Newton's law of gravitation --
it is possible to derive predictions to the effect that under certain specified
conditions certain specified observable phenomena will occur. The actual
occurrence of these phenomena constitutes confirming evidence, their
non-occurrence disconfirming evidence for the hypothesis. It follows in
particular that an empirical hypothesis is theoretically disconfirmable; i.e.,
it is possible to indicate what kind of evidence, if actually encountered, would
disconfirm the hypothesis. In the light of this remark, consider now a simple
"hypothesis" from arithmetic: 3 + 2 = 5. If this is actually an empirical
generalization of past experiences, then it must be possible to state what kind
of evidence would oblige us to concede the hypothesis was not generally true
after all. If any disconfirming evidence for the given proposition can be
thought of, the following illustration might well be typical of it: We place
some microbes on a slide, putting down first three of them and then another two.
Afterwards we count all the microbes to test whether in this instance 3 and 2
actually added up to 5. Suppose now that we counted 6 microbes altogether. Would
we consider this as an empirical disconfirmation of the given proposition, or at
least as a proof that it does not apply to microbes? Clearly not; rather, we
would assume we had made a mistake in counting or that one of the microbes had
split in two between the first and the second count. But under no circumstances
could the phenomenon just described invalidate the arithmetical proposition in
question; for the latter asserts nothing whatever about the behavior of
microbes; it merely states that any set consisting of 3 + 2 objects may also be
said to consist of 5 objects. And this is so because the symbols "3 + 2" and "5"
denote the same number: they are synonymous by virtue of the fact that the
symbols "2," "3," "5," and "+" are defined (or tacitly understood) in such a way
that the above identity holds as a consequence of the meaning attached to the
concepts involved in it.
4. THE ANALYTIC CHARACTER OF MATHEMATICAL
PROPOSITIONS
The statement that 3 + 2 = 5, then, is true for similar reasons as, say, the
assertion that no sexagenarian is 45 years of age. Both are true simply by
virtue of definitions or of similar stipulations which determine the meaning of
the key terms involved. Statements of this kind share certain important
characteristics: Their validation naturally requires no empirical evidence; they
can be shown to be true by a mere analysis of the meaning attached to the terms
which occur in them. In the language of logic, sentences of this kind are called
analytic or true a priori, which is to indicate that their truth is
logically independent of, or logically prior to, any experiential evidence. And while the
statements of empirical science, which are synthetic and can be validated only
a posteriori, are constantly subject to revision in the light of new
evidence, the truth of an analytic statement can be established definitely, once
and for all. However, this characteristic "theoretical certainty" of analytic
propositions has to be paid for at a high price: An analytic statement conveys
no factual information. Our statement about sexagenarians, for example, asserts
nothing that could possibly conflict with any factual evidence: it has no
factual implications, no empirical content; and it is precisely for this reason
that the statement can be validated without recourse to empirical evidence.
Let us illustrate this view of the nature of mathematical propositions by
reference to another, frequently cited, example of a mathematical -- or rather
logical -- truth, namely the proposition that whenever a = b and b = c then a =
c. On what grounds can this so-called "transitivity of identity" be asserted? Is
it of an empirical nature and hence at least theoretically disconfirmable by
empirical evidence? Suppose, for example, that a, b, c, are certain shades of
green, and that as far as we can see, a = b and b = c, but clearly a =/= c. This
phenomenon actually occurs under certain conditions; do we consider it as
disconfirming evidence for the proposition under consideration? Undoubtedly not;
we would argue that if a a =/= c, it is impossible that a = b and also b = c;
between the terms of at least one of these latter pairs, there must obtain a
difference, though perhaps only a subliminal one. And we would dismiss the
possibility of empirical disconfirmation, and indeed the idea that an empirical
test should be relevant here, on the grounds that identity is a transitive
relation by virtue of its definition or by virtue of the basic postulates
governing it. Hence,
the principle in question is true a priori.
5. MATHEMATICS AS AN AXIOMATIZED DEDUCTIVE SYSTEM
I have argued so far that the validity of mathematics rests neither on its
alleged self-evidential character nor on any empirical basis, but derives from
the stipulations which determine the meaning of the mathematical concepts, and
that the propositions of mathematics are therefore essentially "true by
definition." This latter statement, however, is obviously oversimplified and
needs restatement and a more careful justification. For the rigorous development
of a mathematical theory proceeds not simply from a set of definitions but
rather from a set of non-definitional propositions which are not proved within
the theory; these are the postulates or axioms of the theory. They are formulated in
terms of certain basic or primitive concepts for which no definitions are
provided within the theory. It is sometimes asserted that the postulates
themselves represent "implicit definitions" of the primitive terms. Such a
characterisation of the postulates, however, is misleading. For while the
postulates do limit, in a specific sense, the meanings that can possibly be
ascribed to the primitives, any self-consistent postulate system admits,
nevertheless, many different interpretations of the primitive terms (this will
soon be illustrated), whereas a set of definitions in the strict sense of the
word determines the meanings of the definienda in a unique fashion.
Once the primitive terms and the postulates have been laid down, the entire
theory is completely determined; it is derivable from its postulational basis in
the following sense: Every term of the theory is definable in terms of the
primitives, and every proposition of the theory is logically deducible from the
postulates. To be entirely precise, it is necessary also to specify the
principles of logic which are to be used in the proof of the propositions, i.e.,
in their deduction from the postulates. These principles can be stated quite
explicitly. They fall into two groups: Primitive sentences, or postulates, of
logic (such as: If p and q is the case, then p is the case), and rules of
deduction or inference (including, for example, the familiar modus ponens rule
and the rules of substitution which make it possible to infer, from a general
proposition, any one of its substitution instances). A more detailed discussion
of the structure and content of logic would, however, lead too far afield in the
context of this article.
6. PEANO'S AXIOM SYSTEM AS A BASIS FOR MATHEMATICS
Let us now consider a postulate system from which the entire arithmetic of
the natural numbers can be derived. This system was devised by the Italian
mathematician and logician G. Peano (1858-1932). The primitives of this system
are the terms "0" "number," and "successor." While, of course, no definition of
these terms is given within the theory, the symbol "0" is intended to designate
the number 0 in its usual meaning, while the term "number" is meant to refer to
the natural numbers 0, 1, 2, 3 . . . exclusively. By the successor of a natural
number n, which will sometimes briefly be called n', is meant the natural number
immediately following n in the natural order. Peano's system contains the
following 5 postulates:
P1. 0 is a number
P2. The successor of any number is a number
P3. No two numbers have the same successor
P4. 0 is not the successor of
any number
P5. If P is a property such that (a) 0 has the property P, and
(b) whenever a number n has the property P, then the successor of n also has the
property P, then every number has the property P.
The last postulate embodies the principle of mathematical induction and
illustrates in a very obvious manner the enforcement of a mathematical "truth"
by stipulation. The construction of elementary arithmetic on this basis begins
with the definition of the various natural numbers. 1 is defined as the
successor of 0, or briefly as 0'; 2 as 1', 3 as 2', and so on. By virtue of P2,
this process can be continued indefinitely; because of P3 (in combination with
P5), it never leads back to one of the numbers previously defined, and in view
of P4, it does not lead back to 0 either.
As the next step, we can set up a definition of addition which expresses in a
precise form the idea that the addition of any natural number to some given
number may be considered as a repeated addition of 1; the latter operation is
readily expressible by means of the successor relation. This definition of
addition runs as follows
D1. (a) n + 0 = n; (b) n + k' = (n + k)'.
The two stipulations of this recursive definition completely determine the
sum of any two integers. Consider, for example, the sum 3 + 2. According to the
definitions of the numbers 2 and 1, we have 3 + 2 = 3 + 1' = 3 + (0')'; by D1
(b), 3 + (0')' = (3 + 0')' = ((3 + 0)')'; but by D1 (a), and by the definitions
of the numbers 4 and 5, ((3 + 0)')' = (3')' = 4' = 5. This proof also renders
more explicit and precise the comments made earlier in this paper on the truth
of the proposition that 3 + 2 = 5: Within the Peano system of arithmetic, its
truth flows not merely from the definition of the concepts involved, but also
from the postulates that govern these various concepts. (In our specific
example, the postulates P1 and P2 are presupposed to guarantee that 1, 2, 3, 4,
5, are numbers in Peano's system; the general proof that D1 determines the sum
of any two numbers also makes use of P5.) If we call the postulates and
definitions of an axiomatized theory the "stipulations" concerning the concepts
of that theory, then we may say now that the propositions of the arithmetic of
the natural numbers are true by virtue of the stipulations which have been laid
down initially for the arithmetical concepts. (Note, incidentally, that our
proof of the formula "3 + 2 = 5" repeatedly made use of the transitivity of
identity; the latter is accepted here as one of the rules of logic which may be
used in the proof of any arithmetical theorem; it is, therefore, included among
Peano's postulates no more than any other principle of logic.)
Now, the multiplication of natural numbers may be defined by means of the
following recursive definition, which expresses in a rigorous form the idea that
a product nk of two integers may be considered as the sum of k
terms each of which equals n.
D2. (a) n.0 = 0; (b) n.k' = n.k + n.
It now is possible to prove the familiar general laws governing addition and
multiplication, such as the commutative, associative, and distributive laws (n +
k = k + n; n.k = k.n; n + (k + I) = (n + k) + I;
n.(k.l) = (n.k).l;n.(k +
l) = (n.k) + (n.l)).
commutative |
associative |
distributive |
n + k = k + n
n.k = k.n |
n + (k + l) = (n + k) + l |
n.(k.l) =
(n.k).l
n.(k + l) = (n.k) +
(n.l) |
In terms of addition and multiplication, the inverse operations of
subtraction and division can then be defined. But it turns out that these
"cannot always be performed"; i.e., in contradistinction to the sum and the
product, the difference and the quotient are not defined for every couple of
numbers; for example, 7-10 and 7/10 are undefined. This situation suggests an
enlargement of the number system by the introduction of negative and of rational
numbers.
It is sometimes held that in order to effect this enlargement, we have to
"assume" or else to "postulate" the existence of the desired additional kinds of
numbers with properties that make them fit to fill the gaps of subtraction and
division. This method of simply postulating what we want has its advantages;
but, as Bertrand Russell puts it, they are the same as the advantages of theft over
honest toil; and it is a remarkable fact that the negative as well as the
rational numbers can be obtained from Peano's primitives by the honest toil of
constructing explicit definitions for them, without the introduction of any new
postulates or assumptions whatsoever. Every positive and negative integer (in
contradistinction to a natural number which has no sign) is definable as a
certain set of ordered couples of natural numbers; thus, the integer +2 is
definable as the set of all ordered couples (m,n) of natural numbers
where m = n + 2; the integer -2 is the set of all ordered couples
(m, n) of natural numbers with n = m + 2. (Similarly,
rational numbers are defined as classes of ordered couples of integers. ) The
various arithmetical operations can then be defined with reference to these new
types of numbers, and the validity of all the arithmetical laws governing these
operations can be proved by virtue of nothing more than Peano's postulates and
the definitions of the various arithmetical concepts involved.
The much broader system thus obtained is still incomplete in the sense that
not every number in it has a square root, and more generally, not every
algebraic equation whose coefficients are all numbers of the system has a
solution in the system. This suggests further expansions of the number system by
the introduction of real and finally of complex numbers. Again, this enormous
extension can be effected by mere definition, without the introduction of a
single new postulate.
On the basis thus obtained, the various arithmetical and algebraic operations
can be defined for the numbers of the new system, the concepts of function, of
limit, of derivative and integral can be introduced, and the familiar theorems
pertaining to these concepts can be proved, so that finally the huge system of
mathematics as here delimited rests on the narrow basis of Peano's system: Every
concept of mathematics can be defined by means of Peano's three primitives, and
every proposition of mathematics can be deduced from the five postulates
enriched by the definitions of the non-primitive terms. These deductions can be
carried out, in most cases, by means of nothing more than the principles of
formal logic; the proof of some theorems concerning real numbers, however,
requires one assumption which is not usually included among the latter. This is
the so-called axiom of choice. It asserts that given a class of mutually
exclusive classes, none of which is empty, there exists at least one class which
has exactly one element in common with each of the given classes. By virtue of
this principle and the rules of formal logic, the content of all of mathematics
can thus be derived from Peano's modest system -- a remarkable achievement in
systematising the content of mathematics and clarifying the foundations of its
validity.
7. INTERPRETATIONS OF PEANO'S PRIMITIVES
As a consequence of this result, the whole system of mathematics might be
said to be true by virtue of mere definitions (namely, of the non-primitive
mathematical terms) provided that the five Peano postulates are true. However,
strictly speaking, we cannot, at this juncture, refer to the Peano postulates as
propositions which are either true or false, for they contain three primitive
terms which have not been assigned any specific meaning. All we can assert so
far is that any specific interpretation of the primitives which satisfies the
five postulates -- i.e., turns them into true statements -- will also satisfy
all the theorems deduced from them. But for Peano's system, there are several --
indeed, infinitely many --interpretations which will do this. For example, let
us understand by 0 the origin of a half-line, by the successor of a point on
that half-line the point 1 cm. behind it, counting from the origin, and by a
number any point which is either the origin or can be reached from it by a
finite succession of steps each of which leads from one point to its successor.
It can then readily be seen that all the Peano postulates as well as the ensuing
theorems turn into true propositions, although the interpretation given to the
primitives is certainly not the customary one, which was mentioned earlier. More
generally, it can be shown that every progression of elements of any kind
provides a true interpretation, or a "model," of the Peano system. This example
illustrates our earlier observation that a postulate system cannot be regarded
as a set of "implicit definitions" for the primitive terms: The Peano system
permits of many different interpretations, whereas in everyday as well as in
scientific language, we attach one specific meaning to the concepts of
arithmetic. Thus, e.g., in scientific and in everyday discourse, the concept 2
is understood in such a way that from the statement "Mr. Brown as well as Mr.
Cope, but no one else is in the office, and Mr. Brown is not the same person as
Mr. Cope," the conclusion "Exactly two persons are in the office" may be validly
inferred. But the stipulations laid down in Peano's system for the natural
numbers, and for the number 2 in particular, do not enable us to draw this
conclusion; they do not "implicitly determine" the customary meaning of the
concept 2 or of the other arithmetical concepts. And the mathematician cannot
acquiesce in this deficiency by arguing that he is not concerned with the
customary meaning of the mathematical concepts; for in proving, say, that every
positive real number has exactly two real square roots, he is himself using the
concept 2 in its customary meaning, and his very theorem cannot be proved unless
we presuppose more about the number 2 than is stipulated in the Peano system.
If therefore mathematics is to be a correct theory of the mathematical
concepts in their intended meaning, it is not sufficient for its validation to
have shown that the entire system is derivable from the Peano postulates plus
suitable definitions; rather, we have to inquire further whether the Peano
postulates are actually true when the primitives are understood in their
customary meaning. This question, of course, can be answered only after the
customary meaning of the terms "0," "natural number," and 'successor" has been
clearly defined. To this task we now turn.
8. DEFINITION OF THE CUSTOMARY MEANING OF THE CONCEPTS OF
ARITHMETIC IN PURELY LOGICAL TERMS
At first blush, it might seem a hopeless undertaking to try to define these
basic arithmetical concepts without presupposing other terms of arithmetic,
which would involve us in a circular procedure. However, quite rigorous
definitions of the desired kind can indeed be formulated, and it can be shown
that for the concepts so defined, all Peano postulates turn into true
statements. This important result is due to the research of the German logician
G. Frege (1848-1925) and to the subsequent systematic and detailed work of the
contemporary English logicians and philosophers B. Russell and A. N. Whitehead.
Let us consider briefly the basic ideas underlying these definitions.
A natural number -- or, in Peano's term, a number -- in its customary meaning
can be considered as characteristic of certain classes of objects. Thus, e.g.,
the class of the apostles has the number 12, the class of the Dionne quintuplets
the number 5, any couple the number 2, and so on. Let us now express precisely
the meaning of the assertion that a certain class C has the number 2, or
briefly, that n(C) = 2. Brief reflection will show that the following definiens
is adequate in the sense of the customary meaning of the concept 2: There is
some object x and some object y such that (1) xeC
(i.e., x is an element of C) and yeC, (2) x + y,
and (3) if z is any object such that zeC, then
either z = x or z = y.
(Note that on the basis of this definition it becomes indeed possible to
infer the statement "The number of persons in the office is 2" from "Mr. Brown
as well as Mr. Cope, but no one else is in the office, and Mr. Brown is not
identical with Mr. Cope"; C is here the class of persons in the office.)
Analogously, the meaning of the statement that n(C) = 1 can be defined thus:
There is some x such that XeC, and any object y such
that yeC, is identical with x. Similarly, the customary
meaning of the statement that n(C) = 0 is this: There is no object such that
xeC.
The general pattern of these definitions clearly lends itself to the
definition of any natural number. Let us note especially that in the definitions
thus obtained, the definiens never contains any arithmetical term, but merely
expressions taken from the field of formal logic, including the signs of
identity and difference. So far, we have defined only the meaning of such
phrases as "n(C) = 2," but we have given no definition for the numbers 0, 1, 2,
. . . apart from this context. This desideratum can be met on the basis of the
consideration that 2 is that property which is common to all couples, i.e., to
all classes C such that n(C) = 2. This common property may be conceptually
represented by the class of all those classes which share this property. Thus we
arrive at the definition: 2 is the class of all couples, i.e., the class of all
classes C for which n(C) = 2. This definition is by no means circular because
the concept of couple-in other words, the meaning of "n(C) = 2" has been
previously defined without any reference to the number 2 Analogously, 1 is the
class of all unit classes. i.e.. the class of all classes C for which n(C) = 1.
Finally 0 is the class of all null classes, i.e., the class of all classes
without elements. And as there is only one such class, 0 is simply the class
whose only element is the null class. Clearly, the customary meaning of any
given natural number can be defined in this fashion. In order to characterize the intended
interpretation of Peano's primitives, we actually need, of all the definitions
here referred to, only that of the number 0. It remains to define the terms
"successor" and "integer."
The definition of "successor," whose precise formulation involves too many
niceties to be stated here, is a careful expression of a simple idea which is
illustrated by the following example: Consider the number 5, i.e., the class of
all quintuplets. Let us select an arbitrary one of these quintuplets and add to
it an object which is not yet one of its members. 5', the successor of 5, may
then be defined as the number applying to the set thus obtained (which, of
course, is a sextuplet). Finally, it is possible to formulate a definition of
the customary meaning of the concept of natural number; this definition, which
again cannot be given here, expresses, in a rigorous form, the idea that the
class of the natural numbers consists of the number 0, its successor, the
successor of that successor, and so on.
If the definitions here characterized are carefully written out -- this is
one of the cases where the techniques of symbolic, or mathematical, logic prove
indispensable -- it is seen that the definiens of every one of them contains
exclusively terms from the field of pure logic. In fact, it is possible to state
the customary interpretation of Peano's'primitives, and thus also the meaning of
every concept definable by means of them -- and that includes every concept of
mathematics -- in terms of the following seven expressions (in addition to
variables such as "x" and "C"): not, and, if -- then; for every object
x it is the case that . . .; there is some object x such that . . .;
x is an element of class C; the class of all things x such that .
. . And it is even possible to reduce the number of logical concepts needed to a
mere four: The first three of the concepts just mentioned are all definable in
terms of "neither--nor," and the fifth is definable by means of the
fourth and "neither--nor." Thus, all the concepts of mathematics prove
definable in terms of four concepts of pure logic. (The definition of one of the
more complex concepts of mathematics in terms of the four primitives just
mentioned may well fill hundreds or even thousands of pages; but clearly this
affects in no way the theoretical importance of the result just obtained; it
does, however, show the great convenience and indeed practical indispensability
for mathematics of having a large system of highly complex defined concepts
available.)
9. THE TRUTH OF PEANO'S POSTULATES IN THEIR CUSTOMARY
INTERPRETATION
The definitions characterised in the preceding section may be said to render
precise and explicit the customary meaning of the concepts of arithmetic.
Moreover -- and this is crucial for the question of the validity of mathematics
-- it can be shown that the Peano postulates all turn into true propositions if
the primitives are construed in accordance with the definitions just considered.
Thus, P1 (0 is a number) is true because the class of all numbers -- i.e.,
natural numbers -- was defined as consisting of 0 and all its successors. The
truth of P2 (the successor of any number is a number) follows from the same
definition. This is true also of P5, the principle of mathematical induction. To
prove this, however, we would have to resort to the precise definition of
"integer" rather than the loose description given of that definition above. P4
(0 is not the successor of any number) is seen to be true as follows: By virtue
of the definition of "successor," a number which is a successor of some number
can apply only to classes which contain at least one element; but the number 0,
by definition, applies to a class if and only if that class is empty. While the
truth of P1, P2, P4, P5 can be inferred from the above definitions simply by
means of the principles of logic, the proof of P3 (no two numbers have the same
successor) presents a certain difficulty. As was mentioned in the preceding
section, the definition of the successor of a number n is based on the process
of adding, to a class of n elements, one element not yet contained in that
class. Now if there should exist only a finite number of things altogether then
this process could not be continued indefinitely, and P3, which (in conjunction
with P1 and P2) implies that the integers form an infinite set, would be false.
This difficulty can be met by the introduction of a special "axiom of
infinity" which
asserts, in effect, the existence of infinitely many objects, and thus makes P3
demonstrable. The axiom of infinity does not belong to the generally recognized
laws of logic; but it is capable of expression in purely logical terms and may
be considered as an additional postulate of modern logical theory.
>10. MATHEMATICS AS A BRANCH OF LOGIC
As was pointed out earlier, all the theorems of arithmetic, algebra, and
analysis can be deduced from the Peano postulates and the definitions of those
mathematical terms which are not primitives in Peano's system. This deduction
requires only the principles of logic plus, in certain cases, the axiom of
choice. By combining this result with what has just been said about the Peano
system, the following conclusion is obtained, which is also known as the
thesis of logicism concerning the nature of mathematics:
Mathematics is a branch of logic. It can be derived from logic in the
following sense:
a. All the concepts ot mathematics, i.e., of arithmetic, algebra, and
analysis, can be defined in terms of four concepts of pure logic.
b. All the theorems of mathematics can be deduced from those definitions by
means of the principles of logic (including the axioms of infinity and
choice).
In this sense it can be said that the propositions of the system of
mathematics as here delimited are true by virtue of the definitions of the
mathematical concepts involved, or that they make explicit certain
characteristics with which we have endowed our mathematical concepts by
definition. The propositions of mathematics have, therefore, the same
unquestionable certainty which is typical of such propositions as "All bachelors
are unmarried," but they also share the complete lack of empirical content which
is associated with that certainty: The propositions of mathematics are devoid of
all factual content; they convey no information whatever on any empirical
subject matter.
11. ON THE APPLICABILITY OF MATHEMATICS TO EMPIRICAL
SUBJECT MATTER
This result seems to be irreconcilable with the fact that after all
mathematics has proved to be eminently applicable to empirical subject matter,
and that indeed the greater part of present-day scientific knowledge has been
reached only through continual reliance on and application of the propositions
of mathematics. Let us try to clarify this apparent paradox by reference to some
examples.
Suppose that we are examinina a certain amount of some gas, whose volume v,
at a certain fixed temperature, is found to be 9 cubic feet when the pressure p
is 4 atmospheres. And let us assume further that the volume of the gas for the
same temperature and p = 6 at., is predicted by means of Boyle's law.
Using elementary arithmetic we reason thus: For corresponding values of v and p,
vp = c, and v = 9 when p = 4; hence c = 36: Therefore, when p = 6, then v = 6.
Suppose that this prediction is borne out by subsequent test. Does that show
that the arithmetic used has a predictive power of its own, that its
propositions have factual implications? Certainly not. All the predictive power
here deployed, all the empirical content exhibited stems from the initial data
and from Boyle's law, which asserts that vp = c for any two corresponding values
of v and p, hence also for v = 9, p = 4, and for p = 6 and the corresponding
value of v. The
function of the mathematics here applied is not predictive at all; rather, it is
analytic or explicative: it renders explicit certain assumptions or assertions
which are included in the content of the premises of the argument (in our case,
these consist of Boyle's law plus the additional data); mathematical reasoning
reveals that those premises contain -- hidden in them, as it were, -- an
assertion about the case as yet unobserved. In accepting our premises -- so
arithmetic reveals -- we have-knowingly or unknowingly -- already accepted the
implication that the p-value in question is 6. Mathematical as well as logical
reasoning is a conceptual technique of making explicit what is implicitly
contained in a set of premises. The conclusions to which this technique leads
assert nothing that is theoretically new in the sense of not being
contained in the content of the premises. But the results obtained may well be
psychologically new: we may not have been aware, before using the
techniques of logic and mathematics, what we committed ourselves to in accepting
a certain set of assumptions or assertions.
A similar analysis is possible in all other cases of applied mathematics,
including those involving, say, the calculus. Consider, for example, the
hypothesis that a certain object, moving in a specified electric field, will
undergo a constant acceleration of 5 feet/sec2. For the purpose of
testing this hypothesis, we might derive from it, by means of two successive
integrations, the prediction that if the object is at rest at the beginning of
the motion, then the distance covered by it at any time t is 5/2t2
feet. This conclusion may clearly be psychologically new to a person not
acquainted with the subject, but it is not theoretically new; the content of the
conclusion is already contained in that of the hypothesis about the constant
acceleration. And indeed, here as well as in the case of the compression of a
gas, a failure of the prediction to come true would be considered as indicative
of the factual incorrectness of at least one of the premises involved (f.ex., of
Boyle's law in its application to the particular gas), but never as a sign that
the logical and mathematical principles involved might be unsound.
Thus, in the establishment of empirical knowledge, mathematics (as well as
logic) has, so to speak, the function of a theoretical juice extractor: the
techniques of mathematical and logical theory can produce no more juice of
factual information than is contained in the assumptions to which they are
applied; but they may produce a great deal more juice of this kind than might
have been anticipated upon a first intuitive inspection of those assumptions
which form the raw material for the extractor.
At this point, it may be well to consider briefly the status of those
mathematical disciplines which are not outgrowths of arithmetic and thus of
logic; these include in particular topology, geometry, and the various branches
of abstract algebra, such as the theory of groups, lattices, fields, etc. Each
of these disciplines can be developed as a purely deductive system on the basis
of a suitable set of postulates. If P be the conjunction of the postulates for a
given theory, then the proof of a proposition T of that theory consists in
deducing T from P by means of the principles of formal logic. What is
established by the proof is therefore not the truth of T. but rather the fact
that T is true provided that the postulates are. But since both P and T contain
certain primitive terms of the theory, to which no specific meaning is assigned,
it is not strictly possible to speak of the truth of either P or T; it is
therefore more adequate to state the point as follows: If a proposition T is
logically deduced from P, then every specific interpretation of the primitives
which turns all the postulates of P into true statements, will also render T a
true statement. Up to this point, the analysis is exactly analogous to that of
arithmetic as based on Peano's set of postulates. In the case of arithmetic,
however, it proved possible to go a step further, namely to define the customary
meanings of the primitives in terms of purely logical concepts and to show that
the postulates -- and therefore also the theorems -- of arithmetic are
unconditionally true by virtue of these definitions. An analogous procedure is
not applicable to those disciplines which are not outgrowths of arithmetic: The
primitives of the various branches of abstract algebra have no specific
"customary meaning"; and if geometry in its customary interpretation is thought
of as a theory of the structure of physical space, then its primitives have to
be construed as referring to certain types of physical entities, and the
question of the truth of a geometrical theory in this interpretation turns into
an empirical problem. For the purpose of applying any one of these non-arithmetical
disciplines to some specific field of mathematics or empirical science, it is
therefore necessary first to assign to the primitives some specific meaning and
then to ascertain whether in this interpretation the postulates turn into true
statements. If this is the case, then we can be sure that all the theorems are
true statements too, because they are logically derived from the postulates and
thus simply explicate the content of the latter in the given interpretation. In
their application to empirical subject matter, therefore, these mathematical
theories no less than those which grow out of arithmetic and ultimately out of
pure logic, have the function of an analytic tool, which brings to light the
implications of a given set of assumptions but adds nothing to their content.
But while mathematics in no case contributes anything to the content of our
knowledge of empirical matters, it is entirely indispensable as an instrument
for the validation and even for the linguistic expression of such knowledge: The
majority of the more far-reaching theories in empirical science-including those
which lend themselves most eminently to prediction or to practical application
-- are stated with the help of mathematical concepts; the formulation of these
theories makes use, in particular, of the number system, and of functional
relationships among different metrical variables. Furthermore, the scientific
test of these theories, the establishment of predictions by means of them, and
finally their practical application, all require the deduction, from the general
theory, of certain specific consequences; and such deduction would be entirely
impossible without the techniques of mathematics which reveal what the given
general theory implicitly asserts about a certain special case.
Thus, the analysis outlined on these pages exhibits the system of mathematics
as a vast and ingenious conceptual structure without empirical content and yet
an indispensable and powerful theoretical instrument for the scientific
understanding and mastery of the world of our experience. |