柯西,无限小和离去量词的幽灵

J. Bair, Piotr Błaszczyk, R. Ely, V. Henry, V. Kanovei, Karin U. Katz, M. Katz, T. Kudryk, Semen Samsonovich Kutateladze, T. Mcgaffey, T. Mormann, D. Schaps, David Sherry
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引用次数: 11

摘要

莱布尼茨、欧拉和柯西中依赖无穷小的过程已经在Weierstrassian和Robinson的框架中得到了解释。后者为古典大师的程序提供了更接近的代理。因此,莱布尼茨对可分配数和不可分配数的区分在罗宾逊的框架中找到了标准数和非标准数的区别的代理,而莱布尼茨的同质性定律及其隐含的相等概念在可忽略项方面找到了标准部分的数学形式化。很难在韦尔斯特拉斯框架中提供平行的形式化,但自石黑浩以来,学者们一直在寻找离去量词的幽灵,为莱布尼茨的无穷小提供韦尔斯特拉斯的解释。欧拉也有类似的等式概念,直到可以忽略不计的项,他区分了两种类型:几何和算术。欧拉通常将乘积分解为特定的无限因子,并使用具有无限指数的二项式公式。这些过程在罗宾逊的框架中有直接的超有限类似物,而在魏尔斯特拉的框架中,它们只能通过明显偏离欧拉自己的表述的释义来重新解释。柯西用无限小给出了连续性的清晰定义,这些定义在罗宾逊的框架中已经找到了形式化的形式,但在魏尔斯特拉西框架下工作的学者们要么声称柯西是模糊的,要么在他的工作中寻找离去的量词的幽灵。柯西的过程在他1853年的求和定理(连续函数的级数)的背景下更容易理解从罗宾逊的框架的观点,在那里人们可以利用工具,如一致收敛概念的点向定义。关键词:史学;无穷小;拉丁模型;蝴蝶模型
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Cauchy, infinitesimals and ghosts of departed quantifiers
Procedures relying on infinitesimals in Leibniz, Euler and Cauchy have been interpreted in both a Weierstrassian and Robinson's frameworks. The latter provides closer proxies for the procedures of the classical masters. Thus, Leibniz's distinction between assignable and inassignable numbers finds a proxy in the distinction between standard and nonstandard numbers in Robinson's framework, while Leibniz's law of homogeneity with the implied notion of equality up to negligible terms finds a mathematical formalisation in terms of standard part. It is hard to provide parallel formalisations in a Weierstrassian framework but scholars since Ishiguro have engaged in a quest for ghosts of departed quantifiers to provide a Weierstrassian account for Leibniz's infinitesimals. Euler similarly had notions of equality up to negligible terms, of which he distinguished two types: geometric and arithmetic. Euler routinely used product decompositions into a specific infinite number of factors, and used the binomial formula with an infinite exponent. Such procedures have immediate hyperfinite analogues in Robinson's framework, while in a Weierstrassian framework they can only be reinterpreted by means of paraphrases departing significantly from Euler's own presentation. Cauchy gives lucid definitions of continuity in terms of infinitesimals that find ready formalisations in Robinson's framework but scholars working in a Weierstrassian framework bend over backwards either to claim that Cauchy was vague or to engage in a quest for ghosts of departed quantifiers in his work. Cauchy's procedures in the context of his 1853 sum theorem (for series of continuous functions) are more readily understood from the viewpoint of Robinson's framework, where one can exploit tools such as the pointwise definition of the concept of uniform convergence. Keywords: historiography; infinitesimal; Latin model; butterfly model
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