Michael Resnik

Michael Resnik
Born Michael David Resnik
(1938-03-20) March 20, 1938
New Haven, Connecticut
Residence Chatham County, North Carolina
Alma mater Yale University
Harvard University
School Analytic philosophy
Main interests
Philosophy of mathematics

Michael David Resnik (born March 20, 1938) is a leading contemporary American philosopher of mathematics.[1][2]

Biography

Resnick obtained his B.A. in mathematics and philosophy at Yale University in 1960, and his PhD in Philosophy at Harvard University in 1964. He wrote his thesis on Frege.[3][4] He was appointed Associate Professor at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill in 1967, Professor in 1975, and University Distinguished Professor in 1988.[5] He is Professor Emeritus of University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and currently resides in rural Chatham County, North Carolina.

Books

Journal articles

Notes

  1. M. D. Resnik (1974) On the Philosophical Significance of Consistency Proofs, Journal of Philosophical Logic pp. 133–147 URL DOI
  2. M. D. Resnik (1981) Mathematics as a Science of Patterns: Ontology and Reference, Noûs Vol. 15, No. 4, Special Issue on Philosophy of Mathematics, pp. 529–550. URL DOI
  3. M. D. Resnik (1964) Dissertation: Frege's Methodology: A Critical Study, Harvard University, 274 pp.
  4. M. D. Resnik (1981) Frege and Analytic Philosophy: Facts and Speculations Midwest Studies In Philosophy Vol. 6, pp. 83–104. DOI
  5. "UNC Graduate Record 2002–2004".


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