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Logical Empiricism in North America
Gary L. Hardcastle and Alan W. Richardson, editors
$50.00 Cloth
ISBN: 0-8166-4221-4
ISBN-13: 978-0-8166-4221-2
An essential overview of this important intellectual movement.
This latest volume in the longest-standing and most influential series in the field of the philosophy of science extends and expands on the discipline’s recent historical turn. These essays take up the historical, sociological, and philosophical questions surrounding the particular intellectual movement of logical empiricism—both its emigration from Europe to North America in the 1930s and 1940s and its development in North America through the 1940s and 1950s. With an introduction placing them in their philosophical and historical context, these essays bear witness to the fact that the history of the philosophy of science, far more than a mere repository of anecdote and chronology, might be able to produce a decisive transformation in the philosophy of science itself.
Contributors: Richard Creath, Michael Friedman, Rudolf Haller, Don Howard, Diederick Raven, George Reisch; Thomas Ricketts, Friedrich K. Stadler, Thomas E. Uebel, U of Manchester.
Gary L. Hardcastle is assistant professor of philosophy at Bloomsburg University.
Alan W. Richardson is associate professor of philosophy at the University of British Columbia.360 pages | 5 7/8 x 9 | 2003
Minnesota Studies in the Philosophy of Science Series, volume XVIIITABLE OF CONTENTS
Introduction: Logical Empiricism in North America
Alan W. Richardson and Gary L. Hardcastle1. Logical Empiricism, American Pragmatism, and the Fate of Scientific Philosophy in North America
Alan W. Richardson2. Two Left Turns Make a Right: On the Curious Political Career of North American Philosophy of Science at Midcentury
Don Howard3. Hempel and the Vienna Circle
Michael Friedman4. On Herbert Feigl
Rudolf Haller5. Edgar Zilsel in America
Diederick Raven6. Philipp Frank's History of the Vienna Circle: A Programmatic Retrospective
Thomas E. Uebel7. Debabelizing Science: The Harvard Science of Science Discussion Group, 1940-41
Gary L. Hardcastle8. Disunity in the International Encyclopedia of Unified Science
George Reisch9. Transfer and Transformation of Logical Empiricism: Quantitative and Qualitative Aspects
Friedrich K. Stadler10. The Linguistic Doctrine and Conventionality: The Main Argument in "Carnap and Logical Truth"
Richard Creath11. Languages and Calculi
Thomas RickettsContributors
Index