The article investigates one of the key contributions to modern structural mathematics, namely Hilbert’sFoundations of Geometry(1899) and its mathematical roots in nineteenth-century projective geometry. A central innovation of Hilbert’s book was to provide semantically minded independence proofs for various fragments of Euclidean geometry, thereby contributing to the development of the model-theoretic point of view in logical theory. Though it is generally acknowledged that the development of model theory is intimately bound up with innovations in 19th century geometry (in particular, the development of non-Euclidean geometries), so far, little has been said about how exactly model-theoretic concepts grew out of methodological investigations within projective geometry. This article is supposed to fill this lacuna and investigates this geometrical prehistory of modern model theory, eventually leading up to Hilbert’sFoundations.
In a series of articles dating from 1903 to 1906, Frege criticizes Hilbert's methodology of proving the independence and consistency of various fragments of Euclidean geometry in his Foundations of Geometry. In the final part of the last article, Frege makes his own proposal as to how the independence of genuine axioms should be proved. Frege contends that independence proofs require the development of a 'new science' with its own basic truths. This paper aims to provide a reconstruction of this New Science that meets modern standards and to examine possible problems surrounding Frege's original proposal. The paper is organized as follows: the first two sections summarize the main points of the Frege-Hilbert controversy and discuss some issues surrounding the problem of independence proofs. Section 3 contains an informal presentation of Frege's proposal. In section 4 a more detailed reconstruction of Frege's New Science is set out while section 5 examines what is left out. The concluding section is devoted to a discussion of Frege's strategy and its significance from a broader perspective.
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