This question has two votes to delete. Not sure it is is a good idea to delete it. Perhaps, before a final vote is cast a meta could be created.
as it possibly contributed to this, while being (in view of the content of meta directly linked below it, obviously) obsolete.
]]>But about "structuralism", and thanks Jon for bringing it up again. In the philosophy of mathematics this term is usually used to describe a position in mathematical ontology, by which one holds that what exists in mathematics is not mathematical objects, but rather mathematical structure, relations between objects. (e.g. see Daniel Isaacson's paper "The Reality of Mathematics..." for a great account of it). This is the view that it doesn't matter what the real numbers are really made out of, as objects, as long as they form altogether a complete ordered field, which is the structure that characterizes them. This philosophy of structuralism, of course, runs through the heart of category theory, and some use it to criticise set theory, although this is misguided in my view, since of course set theorists don't care what their sets are made out of either, as long as the set-membership relation has its characteristic properties, which is the relevant structure for set-theorists. In this sense, the philosophy of structuralism is pervasive in contemporary mathematics. Meanwhile, in the question and in the links you provide, it seems that the term structuralism is used differently, not as a matter of mathematical ontology, but rather simply as a mathematical methodology or attitude, a predisposition towards building theories rather than solving problems. But I'd like to learn more about the distinction, which is what I had meant in my comment.
]]>If that reading is correct, I can see why the underlying idea might be seductive. Unfortunately, this question (if I've understood it correctly) is almost certainly not right for MO (and unfortunately for JDH, I doubt the OP really wants to talk about structuralism in any sense of the word).
]]>I did however feel that mention of Bourbaki wasn't pertinent to the question, which I took to be whether doing mathematics in the manner of a Grothendieck was still 'viable' (whatever that means exactly). I would feel that way all the more if "Bourbakian structuralism" were brought up.
]]>I'll unlock after I see that this is going somewhere productive.
]]>http://mathoverflow.net/questions/116201/does-bourbakis-and-grothendiecks-approach-to-mathematics-survive-today-clos
I don't think it deserves to be re-opened. I'm not so sure if it should be deleted. But this could be a borderline case people want to discuss.
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