This edited work presents contemporary mathematical practice in the foundational mathematical theories, in particular set theory and the univalent foundations.
“The volume succeeds in presenting a pleasantly non-biased, balanced, and multi-faceted selection of papers which does not convey the impression that any one particular approach or school would be too dominant. … The volume is well-edited and curated. The many cross-references amongst the contributions help one appreciate the volume as something more than the mere sum of its parts, after all, conveying the feel of an actual ongoing discussion.” (Hans-Christoph Kotzsch, Philosophia Mathematica, Vol. 30 (1), February, 2022)
Stefania Centrone is currently Privatdozentin at the University of Hamburg and was deputy Professor of Theoretical Philosophy at the Georg-August-Universität Göttingen. In 2012 she was awarded a DFG-Eigene Stelle for the project Bolzanos und Husserls Weiterentwicklung von Leibnizens Ideen zur Mathesis Universalis at the Carl-von-Ossietzky University of Oldenburg. She is author/editor, among others, of the volume
Logic and philosophy of Mathematics in the Early Husserl (Springer 2010) and
Studien zu Bolzano (Academia Verlag 2015).
Deborah Kant studied mathematics at Free University and Humboldt University in Berlin, and specialized in set theory and logic. At the DMV Students' Conference 2015 in Hamburg, her talk about her master's thesis “Cardinal Sequences in ZFC” was being awarded. Since 2015, she is a PhD student at the Humboldt University Berlin under the supervision of Karl-Georg Niebergall with a project on naturalness inset theory.
Deniz Sarikaya is PhD-Student of Philosophy (BA: 2012, MA: 2016) and studies Mathematics (BA: 2015) at the University of Hamburg with experience abroad at the Universiteit van Amsterdam and Universidad de Barcelona. He stayed a term as a Visiting Student Researcher at the University of California, Berkeley developing a project on the Philosophy of Mathematical Practice concerning the Philosophical impact of the usage of automatic theorem prover and as a RISE research intern at the University of British Columbia. He is mainly focusing on philosophy of mathematics and logic.