Stockholm Colloqium in Philosophy: Jan von Plato (Helsinki)
Lecture
Date: Thursday 26 September 2024
Time: 16.00 – 17.45
Location: D299
What kind of a philosopher was Gödel?
Abstract:
Kurt Gödel (1906-1978) belonged to a university tradition that combined the exact sciences with a profound study of philosophy. Recent work on the enormous amount of shorthand manuscripts he left behind shows that his basic view of science and philosophy was formed already at the end of his last school year: a monistic philosophy that is far away from materialism and empiricism, but not thoroughly idealistic.
Gödel's style was not one of extensive philosophical texts. He composed instead endless lists of remarks, typically less than a page in length; one example is his book-length 340 numbered remarks on the foundations of quantum mechanics that he took to show that "Kant was right." More generally, his work in logic, mathematics, physics, and theology was guided by his search of an "absolute philosophy" inspired by Leibniz.
Last updated: September 22, 2024
Source: Department of Philosophy