A) The foundations of mathematics and logic. B) The application of mathematics in science. C) The history of mathematics only. D) Literary theory in mathematics.
A) Immanuel Kant. B) René Descartes. C) Gottlob Frege. D) David Hume.
A) Dialectical logic. B) Informal logic. C) Symbolic logic. D) Inductive logic.
A) They are arbitrary rules without importance. B) They are foundational truths upon which mathematics is built. C) They are merely historical artifacts of mathematics. D) They are secondary to theorems.
A) The view that reality is composed of indivisible particles. B) The idea that all truth is ultimately subjective. C) The concept of minimalism in logical expressions. D) The belief that logical propositions break down into simpler propositions.
A) Russell's Paradox. B) Hilbert's Paradox. C) Cantor's Paradox. D) Zeno's Paradox.
A) Principia Mathematica. B) Organon. C) The Critique of Pure Reason. D) Mathematical Foundations.
A) They are completely separate disciplines. B) Mathematics serves as a foundation for philosophical inquiry. C) Philosophy undermines mathematical truths. D) Philosophy is merely an extension of mathematics.
A) Extensive use of diagrams. B) Logical clarity. C) Historical accuracy. D) Computational complexity. |