A Philosophical Path from Königsberg to Kyoto: The Science of the Infinite and the Philosophy of Nothingness

Sophia 60 (4):851-868 (2020)
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Abstract

‘Mathematics is the science of the infinite, its goal the symbolic comprehension of the infinite with human, that is finite, means.’ Along this line, in The Open World, Hermann Weyl contrasted the desire to make the infinite accessible through finite processes, which underlies any theoretical investigation of reality, with the intuitive feeling for the infinite ‘peculiar to the Orient,’ which remains ‘indifferent to the concrete manifold of reality.’ But a critical analysis may acknowledge a valuable dialectical opposition. Struggling to spell out the infinity of real numbers mathematicians come to see the active role of emptiness. Pondering over the essence of self-awareness, the Japanese philosopher Nishida Kitarō comes to see the ‘place’ where it abides as absolute nothingness. Thus, the two ways of seeing coalesce into a perspective in which infinity and nothingness mirror each other.

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Author's Profile

Rossella Lupacchini
University of Bologna

Citations of this work

Nishida Kitarō.John Maraldo - forthcoming - Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.

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References found in this work

The philosophy of symbolic forms.Ernst Cassirer, Ralph Manheim & Charles W. Hendel - 1957 - Les Etudes Philosophiques 12 (4):399-399.
The individual and the cosmos in Renaissance philosophy.Ernst Cassirer - 1963 - Mineola, N.Y.: Dover Publications. Edited by Mario Domandi.
Was Sind und was Sollen Die Zahlen?Richard Dedekind - 1888 - Cambridge University Press.

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