"Prof. B. J. Delbœuf and Prof. H. Poincaré have expressed their conceptions as to the nature of the bases of mathematics, in articles contributed to The Monist. The latter treats the subject from a purely mathematical standpoint, while Dr. Ernst Mach in his little book Space and Geometry, in the chapter "On Physiological, as Distinguished from Geometrical, Space" attacks the problem in a very original manner and takes into consideration mainly the natural growth of space conception. His exposition might be called "the physics of geometry.""
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Note: citing "Are the Dimensions of the Physical World Absolute?" by Prof B. J. Delboeuf, The Monist January, 1894; "On the Foundations of Geometry," by Prof. H. Poincaré, The Monist October, 1898; also "Relations Between Experimental and Mathematical Physics," The Monist, July, 1902.
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