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Modern Mathematics progressively developed formal environments that became increasingly autonomous, internally stable, and structurally navigable, reducing their dependence on concrete experience. In this context, the affinity between AI and contemporary mathematical practice appears less accidental than it may initially seem.
The essay also discusses possible limits of formal navigability, particularly regarding the emergence of genuinely new conceptual regimes and forms of mathematical intelligibility. Husserl's reflections on mathematization and the distancing of science from the Lebenswelt provide a broader philosophical framework for understanding this process.
We finally suggest that the contemporary debate on AI may concern less a threat to Mathematics itself than a challenge to the historical image of the mathematician as the privileged interpreter of mathematical structures.
From: Jaime Ripoll Ripoll [view email]
[v1]
Wed, 27 May 2026 05:02:20 UTC (6 KB)
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