Mathematical semantics: a dual history? 1965-1975

The consolidation of knowledge formations into academic disciplines is a gradual process, whose transition is marked by institutional entrenchment and a gain in external legitimacy. While there’s a consensus in the historical literature that computer science had emerged as a new academic discipline...

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Main Author: Loh, Yi Fong
Other Authors: Hallam Stevens
Format: Final Year Project
Language:English
Published: Nanyang Technological University 2022
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/156952
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1569522023-02-28T23:14:21Z Mathematical semantics: a dual history? 1965-1975 Loh, Yi Fong Hallam Stevens Ng Keng Meng School of Physical and Mathematical Sciences KMNg@ntu.edu.sg, HStevens@ntu.edu.sg Science::Mathematics::Mathematical logic Humanities::History::Europe The consolidation of knowledge formations into academic disciplines is a gradual process, whose transition is marked by institutional entrenchment and a gain in external legitimacy. While there’s a consensus in the historical literature that computer science had emerged as a new academic discipline by the late 1960s in America, it remains unclear when computing research became a scientific discipline in the UK. This thesis focuses on a particular a research programme in formal semantics, known as mathematical semantics that emerged from collaboration in 1969, beginning with its institutional origins in the Oxford Programming Research Group from 1965. Mathematical semantics, also known as Scott-Strachey semantics, is argued to be a site of disciplinary consolidation of computing research in the UK into computing science by the early 1970s. This account draws on primarily on scientific publications, archival material, and heretofore disparate disciplinary histories to flesh out an intertwined history of science that conjoins the histories of computing and mathematics in understanding disciplinary consolidation. This is informed by a mathematical literature review of what is now called domain theory. In concluding, I discuss how my historical account and its historiography sheds light on the history of computer science, especially with regard to the history of formal methods that mathematical semantics is a part of how historians can bring technical and sociohistorical perspectives into closer conversation with each other. Bachelor of Science in Mathematical Sciences 2022-05-04T03:02:45Z 2022-05-04T03:02:45Z 2022 Final Year Project (FYP) Loh, Y. F. (2022). Mathematical semantics: a dual history? 1965-1975. Final Year Project (FYP), Nanyang Technological University, Singapore. https://hdl.handle.net/10356/156952 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/156952 en application/pdf Nanyang Technological University
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Science::Mathematics::Mathematical logic
Humanities::History::Europe
spellingShingle Science::Mathematics::Mathematical logic
Humanities::History::Europe
Loh, Yi Fong
Mathematical semantics: a dual history? 1965-1975
description The consolidation of knowledge formations into academic disciplines is a gradual process, whose transition is marked by institutional entrenchment and a gain in external legitimacy. While there’s a consensus in the historical literature that computer science had emerged as a new academic discipline by the late 1960s in America, it remains unclear when computing research became a scientific discipline in the UK. This thesis focuses on a particular a research programme in formal semantics, known as mathematical semantics that emerged from collaboration in 1969, beginning with its institutional origins in the Oxford Programming Research Group from 1965. Mathematical semantics, also known as Scott-Strachey semantics, is argued to be a site of disciplinary consolidation of computing research in the UK into computing science by the early 1970s. This account draws on primarily on scientific publications, archival material, and heretofore disparate disciplinary histories to flesh out an intertwined history of science that conjoins the histories of computing and mathematics in understanding disciplinary consolidation. This is informed by a mathematical literature review of what is now called domain theory. In concluding, I discuss how my historical account and its historiography sheds light on the history of computer science, especially with regard to the history of formal methods that mathematical semantics is a part of how historians can bring technical and sociohistorical perspectives into closer conversation with each other.
author2 Hallam Stevens
author_facet Hallam Stevens
Loh, Yi Fong
format Final Year Project
author Loh, Yi Fong
author_sort Loh, Yi Fong
title Mathematical semantics: a dual history? 1965-1975
title_short Mathematical semantics: a dual history? 1965-1975
title_full Mathematical semantics: a dual history? 1965-1975
title_fullStr Mathematical semantics: a dual history? 1965-1975
title_full_unstemmed Mathematical semantics: a dual history? 1965-1975
title_sort mathematical semantics: a dual history? 1965-1975
publisher Nanyang Technological University
publishDate 2022
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/156952
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