Karl-Georg Niebergall (born 1961) is a German logician and philosopher and professor for logic and philosophy of language at Humboldt University of Berlin.
Biography
editFrom 1982 Niebergall studied mathematics in Darmstadt. After that he studied logic and philosophy of science under Godehard Link and Matthias Varga von Kibéd at Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich (LMU). Niebergall received his PhD in philosophy from LMU in 1995. His PhD dissertation on ‘The metamathematics of non-axiomatized theories’ was awarded with the Stegmüller award of the German Society for Analytic Philosophy. In 1997 Niebergall was a visiting scholar at Stanford University. From 1998 he was associate professor at the department of philosophy at LMU. In 2002 Niebergall received his Habilitation with a dissertation on ‘The foundations of mathematics. Reducibility and ontology’. Since 2008, Niebergall has been professor for logic and philosophy of language at Humboldt University of Berlin.[1][2][3]
Research
editNiebergall’s research has centered on the metamathematics of formal theories related to mereology and infinity. He has also critically engaged with the works of Nelson Goodman, David Hilbert and William W. Tait.[4][5]
Awards
edit- A Stegmüller award of the German Society for Analytic Philosophy (1997) for his doctoral dissertation[6]
References
edit- ^ "Mentis Verlag > Programm > Reihen – Periodika > ethica".
- ^ Philosophie, Information. "Information Philosophie – N".
- ^ Greifswald, Universität. "Fields Konservativitätsbehauptung – Universität Greifswald". Archived from the original on 2017-02-05. Retrieved 2017-02-05.
- ^ "Search results for 'karl-georg%20niebergall' - PhilPapers".
- ^ "Niebergall, Karl Georg | Topoi".
- ^ "Gesellschaft für Analytische Philosophie e.V. - Stegmüller-Preis".