Rudolf Carnap and the Legacy of Logical Empiricism

Rudolf Carnap and the Legacy of Logical Empiricism
Author: R CREATH
Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media
Total Pages: 209
Release: 2012-02-23
Genre: Science
ISBN: 940073929X

This Institute's Yearbook for the most part, documents its recent activities and provides a forum for the discussion of exact philosophy, logical and empirical investigations, and analysis of language. This volume holds a collection of papers on various aspects of the work of Rudolf Carnap by an international group of distinguished scholars.​

Logical Empiricism at Its Peak

Logical Empiricism at Its Peak
Author: Maria Neurath
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 424
Release: 2021-11-19
Genre: Philosophy
ISBN: 1000525066

First Published in 1996. This volume reprints pieces from the Vienna Circle period between the manifesto and the adoption of semantics, as well as two commentaries. During this period, the logical empiricists were the most ambitious and the most confident about the success of their enterprise. The first section consists of four ideological classics, The second section reprints three papers on physicalism. The third section consists of three papers on logic and the fourth on reprints three papers on truth, induction, and confirmation.

The Logical Structure of the World

The Logical Structure of the World
Author: Rudolf Carnap
Publisher: Open Court Publishing
Total Pages: 402
Release: 2003
Genre: Philosophy
ISBN: 9780812695236

Available for the first time in 20 years, here are two important works from the 1920s by the best-known representative of the Vienna Circle. In The Logical Structure of the World, Carnap adopts the position of "methodological solipsism" and shows that it is possible to describe the world from the immediate data of experience. In his Pseudoproblems in Philosophy, he asserts that many philosophical problems are meaningless.

The Philosophy of Rudolf Carnap

The Philosophy of Rudolf Carnap
Author: Rudolf Carnap
Publisher:
Total Pages: 0
Release: 1991
Genre: Analysis (Philosophy)
ISBN: 9780812691535

The first volume of the Library of Living Philosophers (LLP) appeared in 1939, the brainchild of the late Professor Paul A. Schilpp. Schilpp saw that it would help to eliminate confusion and endless sterile disputes over interpretation if great philosophers could be confronted by their capable philosophical peers and asked to reply. As well as a number of critical essays with the chosen philosopher's replies to each essay, each volume would include an intellectual autobiography and an up-to-date bibliography The LLP series has exceeded even Schilpp's expectations, enabling great philosophers to do more than clarify by extending and elaborating their thoughts. A volume in the Library of Living Philosophers is not merely a commentary on a philosopher's work; it is a critical part of that work.

The Cambridge Companion to Carnap

The Cambridge Companion to Carnap
Author: Michael Friedman
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Total Pages: 27
Release: 2007-12-20
Genre: Philosophy
ISBN: 0521840155

This book explores the major themes of Carnap's philosophy and discusses his relationship with the Vienna Circle.

Logical Syntax of Language

Logical Syntax of Language
Author: Rudolf Carnap
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 369
Release: 2014-06-23
Genre: Philosophy
ISBN: 1317830601

This is IV volume of eight in a series on Philosophy of the Mind and Language. For nearly a century mathematicians and logicians have been striving hard to make logic an exact science. But a book on logic must contain, in addition to the formulae, an expository context which, with the assistance of the words of ordinary language, explains the formulae and the relations between them; and this context often leaves much to be desired in the matter of clarity and exactitude. Originally published in 1937, the purpose of the present work is to give a systematic exposition of such a method, namely, of the method of " logical syntax".

Inquiries and Provocations

Inquiries and Provocations
Author: Herbert Feigl
Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media
Total Pages: 476
Release: 1980-11-30
Genre: Science
ISBN: 9789027711014

The title is his own. Herbert Feigl, the provocateur and the soul (if we may put it so) of modesty, wrote to me some years ago, "I'm more of a catalyst than producer of new and original ideas all my life . . . ", but then he com pleted the self-appraisal: " . . . with just a few exceptions perhaps". We need not argue for the creative nature of catalysis, but will simply remark that there are 'new and original ideas' in the twenty-four papers selected for this volume, in the extraordinary aperrus of the 25-year-old Feigl in his Vienna dissertation of 1927 on Zufall und Gesetz, in the creative critique and articulation in his classical monograph of 1958 on The 'Mental' and the 'Physical'; and the reader will want to turn to some of the seventy other titles in our Feigl bibliography appended. Professor Feigl has been a model philosophical worker: above all else, honest, self-aware, open-minded and open-hearted; keenly, devotedly, and even arduously the student of the sciences, he has been a logician and an empiricist. Early on, he brought the Vienna Circle to America, and much later he helped to bring it back to Central Europe. The story of the logical empiricist movement, and of Herbert Feigl's part in it, has often been told, importantly by Feigl himself in four papers we have included here.

Carnap's Construction of the World

Carnap's Construction of the World
Author: Alan W. Richardson
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Total Pages: 258
Release: 1998
Genre: Philosophy
ISBN: 0521430089

This book is a major contribution to the history of analytic philosophy in general and of logical positivism in particular. It provides the first detailed and comprehensive study of Rudolf Carnap, one of the most influential figures in twentieth-century philosophy. The focus of the book is Carnap's first major work: Der logische Aufbau der Welt (The Logical Structure of the World). It reveals tensions within the context of German epistemology and philosophy of science in the early twentieth century. Alan Richardson argues that Carnap's move to philosophy of science in the 1930s was largely an attempt to dissolve the tension in his early epistemology. This book fills a significant gap in the literature on the history of twentieth-century philosophy. It will be of particular importance to historians of analytic philosophy, philosophers of science, and historians of science.