In these essays Professor Mach discusses the questions of the nature, origin, and development of our concepts of Space from the three points of view of the physiology and psychology of the senses, history, and physics, in all which departments his profound researches have gained for him an authoritative and commanding position.
Any reader who possesses a sLight knowledge of mathematics may derive from these essays a very adequate idea of the abstruse yet important researches of metageometry..
While in most works on the foundations of geometry one point of view only is emphasized-be it that of logic, epistemology, psychology, history, or the formal technology of the science-here Light is shed upon the subject from all points of view combined, and the different sources from which the many divergent forms that the science of Space has historically assumed, are thus shown forth with a distinctness and precision that in suggestiveness at least leave little to be desired.
In these essays Professor Mach discusses the questions of the nature, origin, and development of our concepts of Space from the three points of view of the physiology and psychology of the senses, history, and physics, in all which departments his profound researches have gained for him an authoritative and commanding position