One of my whims is that I never write "mathematical induction" but just "induction". We are doing maths, so what is the point about precising? We don't say "Let $f$ be a mathematical function from the mathematical set of mathematical real numbers into itself" for example.
My main question is: why do people consider necessary to add the adjective "mathematical" to this vocabulary? A related question that focuses on the "induction" in the name says that the mathematical induction isn't actually inductive. But, there are many terms in mathematics that doesn't exactly correspond to their common sense counter-parts: amoeba, worms, dessins d'enfants, etc are not called mathematical amoeba, mathematical worms or mathematical dessins d'enfants, etc. See the What is? column in The notices of AMS for more examples.
To make the question answerable, we can narrow the main question to these two ones (I am more interested in the second one):
- Who coined the expression "mathematical induction"?
- Is there any discussion or argument from the persons that coined that term about their use of the adjective "mathematical"?
My intuition is that, because a term from the field of logic, it lies in the intersection of maths and philosophy
About question n°1 :
the qualificative "mathematical" was introduced in order to separate this method of proof from the inductive reasoning used in empirical sciences (the "all ravens are black" example); it is common also to call it complete induction, compared to the "incomplete" one used in empirical science.
The reason is straightforward : the mathematical method of proof establish a "generality" ("all odd numbers are not divisible by two") that holds without exception, while the "inductive generalization" established by observation of empirical facts can be subsequently falsified finding a new counter-example.
Note : induction (the non-mathematical one) was already discussed by Aristotle :
For the history of the name "mathematical induction", see
Thus, his method has been criticized by Fermat as being "conjectural", i.e.based on a perceived regularity or repeated schema in a group of formuale.