Signification et vérité dans les écrits philosophico-mathématiques de Jacob Klein
Author(s)
Hopkins, Burt C.Keywords
Husserleidetic numbers
historicity
Klein Jacob
Heidegger
meaning of Being
symbolic numbers
Aristotle
consciousness
body
givenness
species
mind
foundation
imagination
Kant
language
logic
mathematics
numeration
ontology
passivity
phenomenology
ancient philosophy
transcendental philosophy
plasticity
time
Augustine
Husserl
historicité
Klein Jacob
Heidegger
nombres symboliques
nombres-idées
signification de l’être
Aristote
conscience
corps
donation
éidétique
espèces
esprit
essences
fondation
imagination
incarnation
intuition
Kant
langage
logique
mathématique
nombres
objets
ontologie
passivité
phénoménologie
philosophie ancienne
philosophie contemporaine
philosophie transcendantale
plasticité
Augustin d'Hippone
temps
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http://methodos.revues.org/2170Abstract
La manière dont Jacob Klein rend compte de l’historicité propre aux unités de base de la signification dans la pensée de la Grèce ancienne ainsi que de l’Europe moderne est présentée et étudiée en relation au « sens de l'être » dans la pensée phénoménologique heideggerienne et à la conception husserlienne de la signification ontologique instrumentale du calcul symbolique. Sur le fond des reconstructions kleiniennes des nombres éidétiques dans le Sophiste de Platon et de l’ontologie cartésienne des objets mathématiques indéterminés, deux affirmations se trouvent avancées, à savoir (1) que la composition « artithmologique » de l'être dans le Sophiste de Platon représente un défi par rapport au caractère prétendument fondamental du « sens » dans l’historicité heideggerienne de l’être et (2) que la constitution de la conceptualité propre aux unités de base du calcul symbolique excède celle de la conception husserlienne de leur « simple » instrumentalité.Jacob Klein’s account of historicity belonging to the basic units of meaning in ancient Greek and modern European thought is presented and examined in relation to the “meaning of Being” in Heidegger’s phenomenological thought and Husserl’s account of symbolic calculus’ instrumental ontological significance. Against the background of Klein’s reconstructions of eidetic numbers in Plato’s Sophist and Descartes’ ontology of indeterminate mathematical objects, two claims are advanced: (1) that Being’s “arithmological” composition in Plato’s Sophist challenges the fundamentality of “meaning” in Heidegger’s historicity of Being and (2) that the constitution of the conceptuality proper to the symbolic calculus’ basic units transcends that of Husserl’s account of their “mere” instrumentality.
Date
2014-02-11Type
info:eu-repo/semantics/articleIdentifier
oai:revues.org:methodos/2170urn:doi:10.4000/methodos.2170
http://methodos.revues.org/2170
Copyright/License
info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccessCollections
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