This neointuitionism considers the falling apart of the moments of life into qualitatively different parts, to be reunited only while remaining separated by time, as the fundamental phenomenon of the human intellect, passing by abstracting from its emotional... Bulletin of the American Mathematical Society - Page 73by American Mathematical Society - 1914Full view - About this book
| Felix Kaufmann - 1978 - 270 pages
...and below p. 15 Iff. 41 Cf. above p. 46. 42 Cf. for example 'Intuitionism and Formalism', Ie, p. 85: "However weak the position of intuitionism seemed...to be after this period of mathematical development [discovery of non-Euclidean geometries], it has recovered by abandoning Kant's a-priority of space... | |
| Jerrold J. Katz - 1997 - 268 pages
...on the basis of, as he put it, (Kant's) "old intuitionism." The new intuitionism came from the old by "abandoning Kant's apriority of space but adhering the more resolutely to the apriority of time." The mind divides the stream of moments of time into "qualitatively different parts," thereby "creat[ing]... | |
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