
Approximation and Our Intellectual History
A colloquium on mathematics and philosophy by Dr. Nicolas Fillion (PhD)
Date: Friday, Sept. 26
Time: 3:30 pm
Location: Edwards School of Business Room 18, 25 Campus Dr., Saskatoon
Free and open to the public
About this event
Approximation and Our Intellectual History
A talk by Dr. Nicolas Fillion (PhD), Department of Philosophy, Simon Fraser University
Jointly presented by the University of Saskatchewan Department of Mathematics and Statistics and the Department of Philosophy
Philosophers and mathematicians are lovers of truth—exact truth; in many ways, this accounts for our interwoven histories. But this is a tragic love, constantly frustrated by the elusiveness of exact truth. Insofar as mathematicians and philosophers are discussing worldly phenomena, we must rest satisfied with some degree of inexactness. As Russell elegantly put it, "although it may seem a paradox, all exact science is grounded in the idea of approximation." And yet, despite being actually wedded to inexact truth (which on a good day is an approximate truth), little is said about inexact truth and error analysis in philosophy. More is said in mathematics, but key conceptual tools for understanding approximation remain underdeveloped or missing. In this talk, I will articulate what a philosophy of approximation that serves the aim of both philosophers and mathematicians should look like and I will illustrate how common misconceptions about error and approximation lead to mischaracterizing our practices and their history. In mathematics, I will illustrate the point with the history of the WKB method and, in philosophy, with the enduring puzzle of justification in the Agrippa (or Münchhausen) trilemma.
The Colloquium Committee gratefully acknowledges that our colloquium series is supported in part by the Pacific Institute for the Mathematical Sciences.
Info: colloquium@math.usask.ca