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(2019) Meta 11 (2).

How does mathematics get into science, and why?

a Husserlian perspective

Jairo José Da Silva

pp. 323-357

In this paper, I present, first, a categorization of the many uses mathematics has in science as a methodological tool. I identify four: representative, instrumental, predictive and heuristic. I introduce the issue in a historical context, discussing it more systematically afterwards. My approach is Husserlian thoroughly, which means that I hold the following views: 1) real nature is perceptual nature, constituted out of the hyletic material of the senses by the action of built-in psychophysical proto-intentional systems; 2) mathematized nature is an intentional construct devised for methodological purposes; it instantiates idealizations of formal-abstract structures of perceptual nature, but can also incorporate non-representing (imaginary) elements; 3) mathematics serves science by offering contexts of representation of perceptual reality and instruments of theoretical investigation of mathematical substitutes of reality. I conclude by contrasting my approach with Husserl’s own.

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Da Silva, J.J. (2019). How does mathematics get into science, and why?: a Husserlian perspective. Meta 11 (2), pp. 323-357.

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