Repository | Book | Chapter

177869

(1993) Scientific philosophy, Dordrecht, Springer.

Empiricism in the Vienna circle and in the Berlin society for scientific philosophy

recollections and reflections

Carl Gustav Hempel

pp. 1-9

The central ideas of logical, or scientific, empiricism as it developed during the twenties and early thirties in Vienna and in Berlin, grew out of collaborative efforts of scientifically interested philosophers and philosophically interested scientists. Those thinkers noted that while the claims made by the physical sciences were amenable to objective test by experiment and observation, the pronouncements put forward by metaphysics were incapable of any such objective critical appraisal. And while hypotheses advanced in the physical sciences would eventually be accepted or rejected and thus lead to the growth of a body of objective scientific knowledge, the problems and pronouncements of metaphysics, inaccessible to objective appraisal, kept reappearing over and over again.

Publication details

DOI: 10.1007/978-94-017-2964-2_1

Full citation:

Hempel, C.G. (1993)., Empiricism in the Vienna circle and in the Berlin society for scientific philosophy: recollections and reflections, in F. Stadler (ed.), Scientific philosophy, Dordrecht, Springer, pp. 1-9.

This document is unfortunately not available for download at the moment.