This Element explores the relationship between phenomenology and mathematics. Its focus is the mathematical thought of Edmund Husserl founder of phenomenology but other phenomenologists and phenomenologically-oriented mathematicians including Weyl Becker Gdel and Rota are also discussed. After outlining the basic notions of Husserl''s phenomenology the author traces Husserl''s journey from his early mathematical studies. Phenomenology''s core concepts such as intention and intuition each contributed to the emergence of a phenomenological approach to mathematics. This Element examines the phenomenological conceptions of natural number the continuum geometry formal systems and the applicability of mathematics. It also situates the phenomenological approach in relation to other schools in the philosophy of mathematics-logicism formalism intuitionism Platonism the French epistemological school and the philosophy of mathematical practice.
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