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The Murder of Professor Schlick
The Murder of Professor Schlick: The Rise and Fall of the Vienna Circle | David Edmonds
3 posts | 1 read | 1 reading | 1 to read
"It is the morning of June 22, 1936. The professor of inductive logic at the University of Vienna, Moritz Schlick, is making his accustomed way up the wide stone stairs that lead into the University. It is 9:15 and a former student of Schlick's, Johann Nelbck, is loitering on the staircase, waiting for him. As Schlick approaches, Johann Nelbck lifts a pistol and fires four shots. A witness hears him shout, "Now you damned bastard, there you have it". Schlick dies immediately. His death spells the ending of the remarkable philosophical grouping of which he had been founder and moving force, the Vienna Circle. This extraordinary group of mathematicians, logicians, physicists, philosophers and social scientists has been holding regular meetings under Schlick's leadership since 1922. But in 1936 the political landscape in Austria is darkening, and exile for members of the Circle already beckons. It is not to be a happy experience for many of them-uprooted from Viennese culture, separated from old friends and intellectual soul-mates. The governing principle for which the Circle is best known, logical positivism, famously maintained that only two types of propositions were meaningful: those that could be verified through experience (e.g. water boils at 100 degrees centigrade) and those that were analytically true - true by virtue of the terms they employed (e.g. all bachelors are unmarried men). All other propositions were, literally, meaningless. These included propositions about God and certain propositions about aesthetics and morality (such as 'murder is wrong'). A list of names linked to the Circle reads like a Who's Who of 20th century philosophy, mathematics and science. In addition to Schlick, it includes Rudolf Carnap, Otto Neurath, Phillip Frank, Hans Hahn, Olga Hahn-Neurath, Karl Menger, Friedrich Waismann, Herbert Feigl, Kurt Gdel, Carl Hempel, W.V.O. Quine, A J Ayer, and also, indirectly but influentially, Ludwig Wittgenstein and Karl Popper. For a period, Logical Positivism with its attempt to analyze 'truth', 'knowledge', and the limits of meaning, was the most fashionable movement in the world. Though its central tenets were ultimately abandoned, the Circle - especially through the exile of its key figures in the UK and US - had an enormous influence on 20th century philosophy and beyond. This book is about the origins, the short, influential life and the untimely death of the Vienna Circle, and the afterlife of its adherents"--
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quote
kspenmoll
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Foreshadowing? Foreboding?

dabbe Both! Yowza! 😳 1y
38 likes1 comment
blurb
kspenmoll
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Found this in my son‘s book shelves-sparked my interest as it combines ideas in philosophy,science, & politics of the “Vienna Circle”, a varied group of intellectuals seeking to illuminate Vienna by expunging pseudoscience & metaphysics.One object of this group was to combat the rise of anti-semitism, fascism, & “ unreason”. Ludwig Wittgenstein makes an appearance in ch.5, a philosopher I was introduced to in Jewish Philosophy as a Guide to Life.

kspenmoll I have to thank all the tagged members of our buddy read group #adventuresinphilosopy #deadphilosopherssociety for our joint reading & discussions because I would never have attempted this book without the background knowledge that I have gained through our sharing of books & ideas.💚💜💙 (edited) 1y
GingerAntics This looks intriguing. I‘m going to have to check this out. 1y
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review
LisaLovesToRead
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Mehso-so

The first half of this book was dreadful. I try to never bail on a book, so I stuck with it. I did enjoy the second half.