"The age-old conflict between our notions of continuity and the scientific concept of number ended in a decisive victory for that latter. This victory was brought about by the necessity of vindicating, of legitimizing... a procedure which ever since the days of Fermat and Descartes had been an indispensable tool of analysis. ...analytic geometry ...this discipline which was born of the endeavors to subject problems of geometry to arithmetical analysis, ended by becoming the vehicle through which the abstract properties of number are transmitted to the mind. It furnished analysis with a rich, picturesque language and directed it into channels of generalization hitherto unthought of. Now, the tacit assumption on which analytic geometry operated was that it was possible to represent the points on a line, and therefore points in a plane and in space, by means of numbers. ...The great success of analytic geometry... gave this assumption an irresistible pragmatic force. ...Under such circumstances mathematics proceeds by fiat. It bridges the chasm between intuition and reason by a convenient postulate. On the one hand, there was the logically consistent concept of real number and its aggregate, the arithmetic continuum; on the other, the vague notions of the point and its aggregate, the linear continuum. All that was necessary was to declare the identity of the two, or, what amounted to the same thing, to assert that: It is possible to assign to any point on a line a unique real number, and, conversely, any real number can be represented in a unique manner by a point on a line. This is the famous Dedekind-Cantor axiom."
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Tobias Dantzig, ' (1930).
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Unification_in_science_and_mathematics
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Unification in science and mathematics
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