The Murder of Professor Schlick: The Rise and Fall of the Vienna Circle
 
Product details:

ISBN13:9780691164908
ISBN10:0691164908
Binding:Hardback
No. of pages:336 pages
Size:215x139 mm
Language:English
Illustrations: 23 b/w illus.
239
Category:

The Murder of Professor Schlick

The Rise and Fall of the Vienna Circle
 
Publisher: Princeton University Press
Date of Publication:
Number of Volumes: Print PDF
 
Normal price:

Publisher's listprice:
GBP 22.00
Estimated price in HUF:
10 626 HUF (10 120 HUF + 5% VAT)
Why estimated?
 
Your price:

9 563 (9 108 HUF + 5% VAT )
discount is: 10% (approx 1 063 HUF off)
The discount is only available for 'Alert of Favourite Topics' newsletter recipients.
Click here to subscribe.
 
Availability:

Estimated delivery time: In stock at the publisher, but not at Prospero's office. Delivery time approx. 3-5 weeks.
Not in stock at Prospero.
Can't you provide more accurate information?
 
  Piece(s)

 
Long description:

From the author of Wittgenstein's Poker and Would You Kill the Fat Man?, the story of an extraordinary group of philosophers during a dark chapter in Europe's history

On June 22, 1936, the philosopher Moritz Schlick was on his way to deliver a lecture at the University of Vienna when Johann Nelböck, a deranged former student of Schlick's, shot him dead on the university steps. Some Austrian newspapers defended the madman, while Nelböck himself argued in court that his onetime teacher had promoted a treacherous Jewish philosophy. David Edmonds traces the rise and fall of the Vienna Circle?an influential group of brilliant thinkers led by Schlick?and of a philosophical movement that sought to do away with metaphysics and pseudoscience in a city darkened by fascism, anti-Semitism, and unreason.

The Vienna Circle's members included Otto Neurath, Rudolf Carnap, and the eccentric logician Kurt Gödel. On its fringes were two other philosophical titans of the twentieth century, Ludwig Wittgenstein and Karl Popper. The Circle championed the philosophy of logical empiricism, which held that only two types of propositions have cognitive meaning, those that can be verified through experience and those that are analytically true. For a time, it was the most fashionable movement in philosophy. Yet by the outbreak of World War II, Schlick's group had disbanded and almost all its members had fled. Edmonds reveals why the Austro-fascists and the Nazis saw their philosophy as such a threat.

The Murder of Professor Schlick paints an unforgettable portrait of the Vienna Circle and its members while weaving an enthralling narrative set against the backdrop of economic catastrophe and rising extremism in Hitler's Europe.



"One of New Statesman's Books of the Year 2020"