Dissertation, Bogazici University (
2019)
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Abstract
This thesis is a critique of Jaakko Hintikka’s reconstruction of Kantian intuition in
logical and mathematical reasoning. I argue that Hintikka’s reconstruction of Kantian
intuition in particular and his reconstruction of Kant's philosophy of mathematics in
general fails to be successful in two ways: First, the logical formula which contains
an instantiated term (henceforth, instantial term) that is introduced by the rule of
existential instantiation in the ecthesis part of a proof of an argument is not even a
proper singular proposition whose relation to its object is supposed to be immediate.
It is not a proper singular proposition because its truth conditions are general, i.e., it
makes a general statement about a class of individuals of the sort instantiated- a
statement whose analysis is based on quantifiers. Second, I show that certain proofs
in mathematics- those in the form of reductio ad absurdum- are not captured by
Hintikka’s reconstruction of Kant’s philosophy of mathematics either.