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Henri Poincaré

Personal Information

Born January 1, 1854
Died January 1, 1912 (58 years old)
Nancy, France
Also known as: Henri Poincaré, Henri Poincare
22 books
5.0 (1)
49 readers

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Books

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Œuvres

Jan Potocki, Sophie, comtesse de Ségur, Antoine Laurent Lavoisier, Joseph Louis Lagrange, James Joyce, Jean François Paul de Gondi de Retz, Lewis Carroll, Paul-Louis Courier, Antoine Léonard Thomas, Stéphane Mallarmé, Nicolas Malebranche, Henri Hymans, Jean Paul Marat, Rosa Luxemburg, Mikhail Aleksandrovich Bakunin, Arthur, comte de Gobineau, Lucius Accius, Arthur Rimbaud, Bernardin de Saint-Pierre, Achille Mbembe, Rudyard Kipling, Pierre Augustin Caron de Beaumarchais, Charles-Louis de Secondat baron de La Brède et de Montesquieu, François duc de La Rochefoucauld, Paul de Kock, Francis de Sales, Lucian of Samosata, Jacques Maritain, Philo of Alexandria, 谷崎潤一郎, Magali Bessone, Henri-Dominique Lacordaire, Simone Weil, Alexis de Tocqueville, François Villon, Bartolomé de las Casas, Jean de La Bruyère, Jean de La Fontaine, Louis Pasteur, Alphonse de Lamartine, Gérard de Nerval, Jacques Bénigne Bossuet, Pierre Maine de Biran, Camille Desmoulins, Turgot, Claude Joseph Dorat, Henri Poincaré, Olympe de Gouges, Jean-Pierre Vernant, Emile Coué, Marquis de Sade, Jean-Pierre Serre, Emmanuel Mounier, Denis Diderot, Friedrich Nietzsche, Gustave Flaubert, Armand Borel, Teresa of Avila, Joseph Conrad, Molière, Gérard Desargues, Alphonse Daudet, Jean-Baptiste Massillon, Frantz Fanon, Ernst Troeltsch, François Rabelais, Emil Cioran, Anatole France, Henri Bergson, François de Salignac de La Mothe-Fénelon, Charles Augustin Sainte-Beuve, Proudhon M., Pierre Corneille, Edmé Mariotte
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La valeur de la science

5.0 (1)
7

La recherche de la verite doit etre le but de notre activite ; c'est la seule fin qui soit digne d'elle. Sans doute nous devons d'abord nous efforcer de soulager les souffrances humaines, mais pourquoi ?

La science et l'hypothèse

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18

"Science and Hypothesis is a classic text in history and philosophy of science. Widely popular since its original publication in 1902, this first new translation of the work in over a century features unpublished material missing from earlier editions. Addressing errors introduced by Greenstreet and Halsted in their early 20th-century translations, it incorporates all the changes, corrections and additions Poincaré made over the years. Taking care to update the writing for a modern audience, Poincarés ideas and arguments on the role of hypotheses in mathematics and in science become clearer and closer to his original meaning, while David J. Stump's introduction gives fresh insights into Poincaré's philosophy of science. By approaching Science and Hypothesis from a contemporary perspective, it presents a better understanding of Poincare's hierarchy of the sciences, with arithmetic as the foundation, geometry as the science of space, then mechanics and the rest of physics. For philosophers of science and scientists working on problems of space, time and relativity, this is a much needed translation of a ground-breaking work which demonstrates why Poincaré is still relevant today. Poincaré saw the recognition of the role of hypotheses in science as an important alternative to both rationalism and empiricism. In Science and Hypothesis, his aim is to show that both in mathematics and in the physical sciences, scientists rely on hypotheses that are neither necessary first principles, as the rationalists claim, nor learned from experience, as the empiricist claim. These hypotheses fall into distinct classes, but he is most famous for his thesis of the conventionality of metric geometry. Poincaré discusses the sciences in a sequence, starting with arithmetic. Mathematical induction is essential in arithmetic, because only by using it can we make assertions about all numbers. Poincaré considers mathematical induction to be a genuine synthetic a priori judgment. He next considers magnitude, which requires arithmetic, but goes further. Likewise, geometry extends our knowledge still further, but requires the theory of magnitude to make measurements, and arithmetic to combine numbers. Poincaré then considers classical mechanics, which again extends our knowledge while relying on the mathematics that came before it. Finally, he considers theories of physics, where we have genuine empirical results, but based on the mathematics, hypotheses and conventions that came before. Thus the sciences are laid out like expanding concentric circles, with new content being added to the base at each level."--Bloomsbury Publishing.