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The philosophy of mathematics and natural laws : another Copernican revolution

Part of the Avebury Series in Philosophy series
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The philosophy of mathematics presented in this book is based on the ideas of Sir William Rowan Hamilton on the ordinal character of numbers, the real numbers, scalar numbers, and the extension to vectors.

The final extension is to Hamilton's quaternions. The algebra is interpreted as comprising of spin, or intrinsic angular momentum.

This led the author to offer a new theory of time-space.

This theory is based on the motion of spin, and not the motion of translation as in Einstein's special theory of relativity.

The motion of spin is absolute, no frame of reference is required.

If time is assumed to have a beginning it would be asymmetric with an arrow, this concept is applied to the laws of nature, which are symmetrical.

The author argues that this is another Copernican Revolution in three respects: absolute time is restored, time has an arrow - is asymmetric, and thirdly the theory is based on the motion of spin which is absolute and more fundamental than the motion of translation.

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Product Details
Ashgate Publishing Limited
1859726542 / 9781859726549
Hardback
115
04/09/1997
United Kingdom
English
vii, 218p.
22 cm
postgraduate /research & professional /undergraduate Learn More