How good does one need to be in mathematics to do good work in philosophy of

How good does one need to be in mathematics to do good work in philosophy of

How good does one need to be in mathematics to do good work in philosophy of mathematics? Does one need to be able to *do* original math research, or just read and understand math research, or neither? Or does the answer depend on the topic within philosophy of math? If so, which topics are those in which math knowledge is most useful, and in which is it least useful?

Read another response by Peter Smith
Read another response about Mathematics, Philosophy, Profession
Print