Principia Mathematica

Principia Mathematica, the landmark work written by Alfred North Whitehead
and Bertrand Russell, and published in three volumes, in 1910, 1912 and
1913. Written as a defense of logicism (i.e., the view that mathematics is
in some significant sense reducible to logic) the book was instrumental in
developing and popularizing modern mathematical logic. It also served as a
major impetus for research in the foundations of mathematics throughout the
twentieth century. Next to Aristotle's Organon, it remains the most
influential book on logic ever written. 

*       History of Principia Mathematica 
*       Significance of Principia Mathematica 
*       Contents of Principia Mathematica 
*       Bibliography 
*       Other Internet Resources 
*       Related Entries 

Interested readers may also wish to view the 

*       Title page of the 1st edition of Principia Mathematica's Volume 1 
*       Cover of the 1st edition of Principia Mathematica to *56. 

________________________________


History of Principia Mathematica

Logicism is the view that (some or all of) mathematics can be reduced to
(formal) logic. It is often explained as a two-part thesis. First, it
consists of the claim that all mathematical truths can be translated into
logical truths or, in other words, that the vocabulary of mathematics
constitutes a proper subset of the vocabulary of logic. Second, it consists
of the claim that all mathematical proofs can be recast as logical proofs
or, in other words, that the theorems of mathematics constitute a proper
subset of the theorems of logic. In Bertrand Russell's words, it is the
logicist's goal "to show that all pure mathematics follows from purely
logical premises and uses only concepts definable in logical terms."[1] 

In its essentials, logicism was first advocated in the late seventeenth
century by Gottfried Leibniz. Later, the idea was defended in greater detail
by Gottlob Frege. During the critical movement initiated in the 1820s,
mathematicians such as Bernard Bolzano, Niels Abel, Louis Cauchy and Karl
Weierstrass succeeded in eliminating much of the vagueness and many of the
contradictions present in the mathematical theories of their day. By the
late 1800s, William Hamilton had also introduced ordered couples of reals as
the first step in supplying a logical basis for the complex numbers. In much
the same spirit, Karl Weierstrass, Richard Dedekind and Georg Cantor had
also all developed methods for founding the irrationals in terms of the
rationals. Using work by H.G. Grassmann and Richard Dedekind, Guiseppe Peano
had then gone on to develop a theory of the rationals based on his now
famous axioms for the natural numbers. Thus, by Frege's day, it was
generally recognized that a large portion of mathematics could be derived
from a relatively small set of primitive notions.

Even so, it was not until 1879, when Frege developed the necessary logical
apparatus, that the project of logicism could be said to have become
technically plausible. Following another five years' work, Frege arrived at
the definitions necessary for logicising arithmetic and, during the 1890s,
he worked on many of the essential derivations. However, with the discovery
of paradoxes such as Russell's paradox at the turn of the century, it
appeared that additional resources would need to be postulated if logicism
were to succeed.

By 1903, both Whitehead and Russell had reached this same conclusion. By
this time, both men were in the initial stages of preparing second volumes
to earlier books on related topics: Whitehead's 1898 A Treatise on Universal
Algebra and Russell's 1903 The Principles of Mathematics. Since their
research overlapped considerably, they began collaborating on what would
eventually become Principia Mathematica. By agreement, Russell worked
primarily on the philosophical parts of the project (including the
philosophically rich Introduction, the theory of descriptions, and the
no-class theory), while the two men collaborated on the technical
derivations. Intially, it was thought that the project might take a year to
complete.

Unfortunately, after almost a decade of difficult work on the part of both
men, Cambridge University Press concluded that publishing Principia would
result in an estimated loss of approximately 600 pounds. Although the press
agreed to assume half this amount and the Royal Society agreed to donate
another 200 pounds, that still left a 100-pound deficit. Only by each
contributing 50 pounds were the authors able to see their work through to
publication.

Today there is not a major academic library anywhere in the world that does
not possess a copy of this landmark publication.


Significance of Principia Mathematica

Achieving Principia's main goal proved to be controversial. Primarily at
issue were the kinds of assumptions that Whitehead and Russell needed to
complete their project. Although Principia succeeded in providing detailed
derivations of many major theorems in set theory, finite and transfinite
arithmetic, and elementary measure theory, two axioms in particular were
arguably non-logical in character: the axiom of infinity and the axiom of
reducibility. The axiom of infinity in effect stated that there exists an
infinite number of objects. Thus, it made the kind of assumption that is
generally thought to be empirical rather than logical in nature. The axiom
of reducibility was introduced as a means of overcoming the not completely
satisfactory effects of the theory of types, the theory that Russell and
Whitehead used to restrict the notion of a well-formed expression, and so to
avoid paradoxes such as Russell's paradox. Although technically feasible,
many critics concluded that the axiom of reducibility was simply too ad hoc
to be justified philosophically. As a result, the question of whether
mathematics could be reduced to logic, or whether it could be reduced only
to set theory, remained open. 

Despite these criticisms, Principia Mathematica proved to be remarkably
influential in at least three other ways. First, it popularized modern
mathematical logic to an extent undreamt of by its authors. By using a
notation superior in many ways to that of Frege, Whitehead and Russell
managed to convey the remarkable expressive power of modern predicate logic
in a way that previous writers had been unable to achieve. Second, by
exhibiting so clearly the deductive power of the new logic, Whitehead and
Russell were able to show how powerful the modern idea of a formal system
could be, thus opening up new work in what was soon to be called metalogic.
Third, Principia Mathematica reaffirmed clear and interesting connections
between logicism and two main branches of traditional philosophy, namely
metaphysics and epistemology, thus initiating new and interesting work in
both these and other areas.

Thus, not only did Principia introduce a wide range of philosophically rich
notions (such as propositional function, logical construction, and type
theory), it also set the stage for the discovery of classical metatheoretic
results (such as those of Kurt Gödel and others) and initiated a tradition
of common technical work in fields as diverse as philosophy, mathematics,
linguistics, economics and computer science.

Today there remains controversy over the ultimate substantive contribution
of Principia, with some authors holding that, with the appropriate
modifications, logicism remains a feasible project. Others hold that the
philosophical and technical underpinnings of the Whitehead/Russell project
simply remain too weak or confused to be of much use to the logicist.
Interested readers are encouraged to consult Hale and Wright (2001), Quine
(1966a), Quine (1966b), Landini (1998) and Linsky (1999).


Contents of Principia Mathematica

Principia Mathematica originally appeared in three volumes. Together these
three volumes are divided into six parts. Volume 1 begins with a lengthy
Introduction containing sections entitled "Preliminary Explanations of Ideas
and Notations," "The Theory of Logical Types," and "Incomplete Symbols." It
also contains Part I, entitled "Mathematical Logic," which contains sections
on "The Theory of Deduction," "Theory of Apparent Variables," "Classes and
Relations," "Logic of Relations," and "Products and Sums of Classes"; and
Part II, entitled "Prolegomena to Cardinal Arithmetic," which contains
sections on "Unit Classes and Couples," "Sub-Classes, Sub-Relations, and
Relative Types," "One-Many, Many-One and One-One Relations," "Selections,"
and "Inductive Relations." 

Volume 2 begins with a "Prefatory Statement of Symbolic Conventions." It
then continues with Part III, entitled "Cardinal Arithmetic," which itself
contains sections on "Definition and Logical Properties of Cardinal
Numbers," "Addition, Multiplication and Exponentiation," and "Finite and
Infinite"; Part IV, entitled Relation-Arithmetic," which contains sections
on "Ordinal Similarity and Relation-Numbers," "Addition of Relations, and
the Product of Two Relations," "The Principle of First Differences, and the
Multiplication and Exponentiation of Relations," and "Arithmetic of
Relation-Numbers"; and the first half of Part V, entitled "Series," which
contains sections on "General Theory of Series," "On Sections, Segments,
Stretches, and Derivatives," and "On Convergence, and the Limits of
Functions."

Volume 3 continues Part V with sections on "Well-Ordered Series," "Finite
and Infinite Series and Ordinals," and "Compact Series, Rational Series, and
Continuous Series." It also contains Part VI, entitled "Quantity," which
itself contains sections on "Generalization of Number," "Vector-Families,"
"Measurement," and "Cyclic Families."

A fourth volume was planned but never completed. 

Contemporary readers (i.e., those who have learned logic in the second half
of the twentieth century or later) will find the book's notation somewhat
antiquated and clumsy. Even so, the book remains one of the great scientific
documents of the twentieth century.


Bibliography


*       Chihara, Charles (1973) Ontology and the Vicious Circle Principle,
Ithaca: Cornell University Press. 
*       Church, Alonzo (1978) "A Comparison of Russell's Resolution of the
Semantical Antinomies with that of Tarski," Journal of Symbolic Logic, 41,
747-760. Repr. in Irvine, A.D., Bertrand Russell: Critical Assessments, vol.
2, New York and London: Routledge, 1999, 96-112. 
*       Church, Alonzo (1974) "Russellian Simple Type Theory," Proceedings
and Addresses of the American Philosophical Association, 47, 21-33. 
*       Copi, Irving (1971) The Theory of Logical Types, London: Routledge
and Kegan Paul. 
*       Frege, Gottlob (1893, 1903) Grundgesetze der Arithmetik, Band I
(1893), Band II (1903), Jena: Verlag Hermann Pohle. Ed. and trans. in part
by M. Furth as The Basic Laws of Arithmetic, Berkeley: University of
California Press, 1964. 
*       Hale, Bob, and Crispin Wright (2001) The Reason's Proper Study,
Oxford: Clarendon Press. 
*       Landini, Gregory (1998) Russell's Hidden Substitutional Theory, New
York and Oxford: Oxford University Press. 
*       Linsky, Bernard (1999) Russell's Metaphysical Logic, Stanford: CSLI
Publications. 
*       Quine, W.V (1960) Word and Object, Cambridge: MIT Press. 
*       Quine, W.V (1966a) Selected Logic Papers, New York: Random House. 
*       Quine, W.V (1966b) Ways of Paradox, New York: Random House. 
*       Ramsey, Frank P. (1931) The Foundations of Mathematics, London:
Kegan, Paul, Trench, Trubner. 
*       Rodriguez-Consuegra, Francisco (1991) The Mathematical Philosophy of
Bertrand Russell, Boston: Birkhäuser Press. 
*       Russell, Bertrand (1903) Principles of Mathematics, Cambridge:
Cambridge University Press. 
*       Russell, Bertrand (1919) Introduction to Mathematical Philosophy,
London: George Allen and Unwin. 
*       Russell, Bertrand (1948) "Whitehead and Principia Mathematica,"
Mind, 57, 137-138. 
*       Russell, Bertrand (1959) My Philosophical Development, London and
New York: Routledge. 
*       Urquhart, Alasdair (1988) "Russell's Zig-Zag Path to the Ramified
Theory of Types," Russell, 8, 82-91. 
*       Whitehead, Alfred North (1898) A Treatise on Universal Algebra,
Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. 
*       Whitehead, Alfred North (1906) On Mathematical Concepts of the
Material World, London: Dulau. 
*       Whitehead, Alfred North, and Bertrand Russell (1910, 1912, 1913)
Principia Mathematica, 3 vols, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Second
edition, 1925 (Vol. 1), 1927 (Vols 2, 3). Abridged as Principia Mathematica
to *56, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1962. 
*       Wright, Crispin (1983) Frege's Conception of Numbers as Objects,
Aberdeen: Aberdeen University Press. 


Other Internet Resources


*       Principia Mathematica: Whitehead and Russell
<http://www.thoralf.uwaterloo.ca/htdocs/scav/principia/principia.html> , by
Stanley Burris (Mathematics, U. Waterloo) 


Related Entries

Frege, Gottlob | Frege, Gottlob: logic, theorem, and foundations for
arithmetic | Leibniz, Gottfried Wilhelm | logic: classical | logicism |
propositional function | Russell, Bertrand | Russell's paradox | type theory
| Whitehead, Alfred North 

Copyright © 2003 
A. D. Irvine <http://www.philosophy.ubc.ca/faculty/irvine/>  
[EMAIL PROTECTED] <mailto:a%2eirvine%40ubc%2eca>        
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Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy



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