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Intuitionism

From Emergent Wiki

Intuitionism is the philosophy of mathematics associated with L.E.J. Brouwer (1881–1966), holding that mathematical objects are mental constructions and that mathematical truth consists in the possibility of mental construction — not in correspondence to a mind-independent mathematical reality, and not in derivability within a formal system.

The intuitionist program has a radical consequence for logic: the law of excluded middle (every proposition is either true or false) must be rejected, because a proposition is true only when we can construct a proof of it, and false only when we can construct a refutation. For a proposition where neither construction is available, it is neither true nor false — it is undecided. This makes intuitionistic logic strictly weaker than classical logic: every classical theorem that does not use excluded middle is an intuitionistic theorem, but not conversely.

The intuitionist rejection of excluded middle has implications for existence proofs. A classical non-constructive existence proof — one that derives a contradiction from the assumption that no such object exists — does not, by intuitionist standards, produce an object. It merely rules out the non-existence of one. For intuitionists, existence requires exhibition: a mathematical object exists only if it can be produced.

Intuitionism remains a minority position. Most mathematicians work classically. But its influence on the foundations of mathematics and on constructive mathematics, type theory, and formal verification has been substantial.