Vienna Circle

The Vienna Circle was a group of philosophers and scientists organized in Vienna under Moritz Schlick. They met weekly, for the most part, beginning in 1922 and ending in 1936, when Schlick was shot to death by an irate graduate student. Many members had left Austria during the rise of the Nazi party. The Circle clashed with the Nazi party over its ideological and mysticism-based scientific research. Their approach to philosophy came to be known as logical positivism. Prominent members of the Circle included Rudolf Carnap, Otto Neurath, Herbert Feigl, Philipp Frank, Friedrich Waismann, Hans Hahn, Ernst Topitsch. They were visited on occasion by Hans Reichenbach, Kurt Gdel, Carl Hempel, Alfred Tarski, W. V. Quine, and A. J. Ayer (who popularized their work in Britain). Karl Popper, though he never attended the Circle's meetings, was influential in the reception and criticism of their doctrines. For some time a few of the group's members met regularly with Ludwig Wittgenstein.

External link

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
eugne henri gravelotte
halizah
phil harding
old world flycatcher
jewish encyclopedia
access copyright
the united states playing card company
ed greenwood
takeo yoshikawa
launceston elliot
viggo jensen
dismas
1700 in literature
1703 in literature
1702 in literature
1704 in literature
1705 in literature
1706 in literature
1707 in literature
1708 in literature
1709 in literature
1701 in literature
rihab taha
dorothy lamour
sam wanamaker
coca cola formula
unsolved mysteries
online copyright infringement liability limitation act
operation rolling thunder
gene sarazen
american society of heating, refrigerating and air conditioning engineers
maitreya
charles grodin
sint martens lierde
deftinge
hemelveerdegem
sint maria lierde
servent
bill pullman
quatloo
designated agent
iso 3166 2:kg
iso 3166 2:2002 12 10
iso 3166 2:es