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Burt C. Hopkins, The Origin of the Logic of Symbolic Mathematics. Edmund Husserl and Jacob Klein (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 2011).
See Jacob Klein, “Phenomenology and The History of Science,” in Philosophical Essays in Memory of Edmund Husserl, ed. M. Farber (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1939), 143–63. Reprinted in J. Klein, Lectures and Essays, ed. R. B. Williamson and E. Zuckerman (Annapolis: St. John’s Press, 1985), 65–84.
William V.O. Quine, “Otherwordly,” in The New York Review of Books, 23 November 1978. And I trust Hopkins would gladly recognize himself in the way in which Goodman described his own book: “This book does not run a straight course from beginning to end. It hunts; and in the hunting, it sometimes worries the same raccoon in different trees, or different raccoons in the same tree, or even what turns out to be no raccoon in any tree. It finds itself balking more than once at the same barrier and taking off on other trails. It drinks often from the same streams, and stumbles over some cruel country. It counts not the kill but what is learned of the territory explored” (Nelson Goodman, Ways of Worldmaking [Indianapolis: Hackett, 1978]).
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