Abstract
In this paper I argue for an association between impurity and explanatory power in
contemporary mathematics. This proposal is defended against the ancient and influential idea
that purity and explanation go hand-in-hand (Aristotle, Bolzano) and recent suggestions that
purity/impurity ascriptions and explanatory power are more or less distinct (Section 1). This
is done by analyzing a central and deep result of additive number theory, Szemerédi’s theorem,
and various of its proofs (Section 2). In particular, I focus upon the radically impure (ergodic)
proof due to Furstenberg (Section 3). Furstenberg’s ergodic proof is striking because it utilizes
intuitively foreign and infinitary resources to prove a finitary combinatorial result and does
so in a perspicuous fashion. I claim that Furstenberg’s proof is explanatory in light of its clear
expression of a crucial structural result, which provides the “reason why” Szemerédi’s theorem is
true. This is, however, rather surprising: how can such intuitively different conceptual resources
“get a grip on” the theorem to be proved? I account for this phenomenon by articulating
a new construal of the content of a mathematical statement, which I call structural content
(Section 4). I argue that the availability of structural content saves intuitive epistemic distinctions
made in mathematical practice and simultaneously explicates the intervention of surprising and
explanatorily rich conceptual resources. Structural content also disarms general arguments for
thinking that impurity and explanatory power might come apart. Finally, I sketch a proposal
that, once structural content is in hand, impure resources lead to explanatory proofs via suitably
understood varieties of simplification and unification (Section 5).