Science Without Numbers
The cover for the first edition, published by Princeton University Press | |
| Author | Hartry Field |
|---|---|
| Language | English |
| Subjects | Philosophy of mathematics |
| Publisher | Princeton University Press (1st ed.), Oxford University Press (2nd ed.) |
Publication date | 1980 |
| Publication place | United States |
| Pages | 130 |
| Award | Lakatos Prize |
| ISBN | 978-0-631-12672-0 |
| OCLC | 967261539 |
| 501 | |
| LC Class | Q175.F477 |
| Website | Oxford Academic |
Science Without Numbers: A Defence of Nominalism is a 1980 book on the philosophy of mathematics by Hartry Field. In the book, Field defends nominalism, the view that mathematical objects such as numbers do not exist. The book was written broadly in response to an argument for the existence of mathematical objects called the indispensability argument. According to this argument, belief in mathematical objects is justified because mathematics is indispensable to science. The main project of the book is producing technical reconstructions of science that remove reference to mathematical entities, hence showing that mathematics is not indispensable to science.
Modelled on Hilbert's axiomatization of geometry, which eschews numerical distances in favor of primitive geometrical relationships, Field demonstrates an approach to reformulate Newton's theory of gravity without the need to reference numbers. According to Field's philosophical program, mathematics is used in science because it is useful, not because it is true. He supports this view with the idea that mathematics is conservative; that is, mathematics cannot be used to derive any physical facts beyond those already implied by the physical aspects of a theory. He further proves that statements in his nominalist reformulation can be systematically associated with mathematical statements, which he believes explains how mathematics can be used to legitimately derive physical facts from scientific theories.