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Vienna Circle
Vienna Circle
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Entrance to the Mathematical Seminar at the University of Vienna, Boltzmanngasse 5. Meeting place of the Vienna Circle.

The Vienna Circle (German: Wiener Kreis) of logical empiricism was a group of elite philosophers and scientists drawn from the natural and social sciences, logic and mathematics who met regularly from 1924 to 1936 at the University of Vienna, chaired by Moritz Schlick. The Vienna Circle had a profound influence on 20th-century philosophy, especially philosophy of science and analytic philosophy.

The philosophical position of the Vienna Circle was called logical empiricism (German: logischer Empirismus), logical positivism or neopositivism. It was influenced by Ernst Mach, David Hilbert, French conventionalism (Henri Poincaré and Pierre Duhem), Gottlob Frege, Bertrand Russell, Ludwig Wittgenstein and Albert Einstein. The Vienna Circle was pluralistic and committed to the ideals of the Enlightenment. It was unified by the aim of making philosophy scientific with the help of modern logic. Main topics were foundational debates in the natural and social sciences, logic and mathematics; the modernization of empiricism by modern logic; the search for an empiricist criterion of meaning; the critique of metaphysics and the unification of the sciences in the unity of science.[1]

The Vienna Circle appeared in public with the publication of various book series – Schriften zur wissenschaftlichen Weltauffassung (Monographs on the Scientific World-Conception), Einheitswissenschaft (Unified Science) and the journal Erkenntnis – and the organization of international conferences in Prague; Königsberg (today known as Kaliningrad); Paris; Copenhagen; Cambridge, UK, and Cambridge, Massachusetts. Its public profile was provided by the Ernst Mach Society (German: Verein Ernst Mach) through which members of the Vienna Circle sought to popularize their ideas in the context of programmes for popular education in Vienna.

During the era of Austrofascism and after the annexation of Austria by Nazi Germany most members of the Vienna Circle were forced to emigrate. The murder of Schlick in 1936 by former student Johann Nelböck put an end to the Vienna Circle in Austria.

History

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The history and development of the Vienna Circle shows various stages:[2]

First Vienna Circle (1907–1912)

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The pre-history of the Vienna Circle began with meetings on the philosophy of science and epistemology from 1908[3] on, promoted by Philipp Frank, Hans Hahn and Otto Neurath.[4]

Hans Hahn, the oldest of the three (1879–1934), was a mathematician. He received his degree in mathematics in 1902. Afterwards he studied under the direction of Ludwig Boltzmann in Vienna and David Hilbert, Felix Klein and Hermann Minkowski in Göttingen. In 1905 he received the Habilitation in mathematics. He taught at Innsbruck (1905–1906) and Vienna (from 1909).

Otto Neurath (1882–1945) studied mathematics, political economy, and history in Vienna and Berlin. From 1907 to 1914 he taught in Vienna at the Neue Wiener Handelsakademie (Viennese Commercial Academy). Neurath married Olga, Hahn's sister, in 1911.

Philipp Frank, the youngest of the group (1884–1966), studied physics at Göttingen and Vienna with Ludwig Boltzmann, David Hilbert and Felix Klein. From 1912, he held the chair of theoretical physics in the German University in Prague.

Their meetings were held in Viennese coffeehouses from 1907 onward. Frank remembered:

After 1910 there began in Vienna a movement which regarded Mach's positivist philosophy of science as having great importance for general intellectual life [...] An attempt was made by a group of young men to retain the most essential points of Mach's positivism, especially his stand against the misuse of metaphysics in science. [...] To this group belonged the mathematician H. Hahn, the political economist Otto Neurath, and the author of this book [i.e. Frank], at the time an instructor in theoretical physics in Vienna. [...] We tried to supplement Mach's ideas by those of the French philosophy of science of Henri Poincaré and Pierre Duhem, and also to connect them with the investigations in logic of such authors as Couturat, Schröder, Hilbert, etc.

— Uebel, Thomas, 2003, p. 70.

A number of further authors were discussed in the meetings such as Franz Brentano, Alexius Meinong, Hermann von Helmholtz, Heinrich Hertz, Edmund Husserl, Sigmund Freud, Bertrand Russell, Alfred North Whitehead, Vladimir Lenin and Gottlob Frege.[5]

Presumably the meetings stopped in 1912, when Frank went to Prague, to hold the chair of theoretical physics left vacant by Albert Einstein. Hahn left Vienna during World War I and returned in 1921.

Formative years (1918–1924)

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The formation of the Vienna Circle began with Hahn returning to Vienna in 1921.[6] Together with the mathematician Kurt Reidemeister he organized seminars on Ludwig Wittgenstein's Tractatus logico-philosophicus and on Whitehead and Russell's Principia Mathematica.

With the support of Hahn, Moritz Schlick was appointed to the chair of philosophy of the inductive sciences at the University of Vienna in 1922 – the chair formerly held by Ernst Mach and partly by Boltzmann. Schlick had already published two important works Raum und Zeit in die gegenwärtigen Physik (Space and Time in contemporary Physics) in 1917 and Allgemeine Erkenntnislehre (General Theory of Knowledge) in 1918.

Immediately after Schlick's arrival in Vienna, he organized discussions with the mathematicians around Hahn. In 1924 Schlick's students Friedrich Waismann and Herbert Feigl suggested to their teacher a sort of regular "evening circle". From winter term 1924 on regular meetings were held at the Institute of Mathematics in Vienna's Boltzmanngasse 5 on personal invitation by Schlick. These discussions can be seen as the beginning of the Vienna Circle.[7]

Non-public phase – Schlick Circle (1924–1928)

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The group that met from 1924 on was quite diverse and included not only recognized scientists such as Schlick, Hahn, Kraft, Philipp Frank, Neurath, Olga Hahn-Neurath, and Heinrich Gomperz, but also younger students and doctoral candidates.[8] In addition, the group invited foreign visitors.

In 1926 Schlick and Hahn arranged to bring Rudolf Carnap to the University of Vienna as a Privatdozent (private lecturer). Carnap's Logical Structure of the World was intensely discussed in the Circle.

Also Wittgenstein's Tractatus logico-philosophicus was read out loud and discussed. From 1927 on personal meetings were arranged between Wittgenstein and Schlick, Waismann, Carnap and Feigl.[9]

Public phase – Schlick Circle and Verein Ernst Mach (1928–1934)

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In 1928 the Verein Ernst Mach (Ernst Mach Society) was founded, with Schlick as its chairman.[10] The aim of the society was the spreading of a "scientific world conception" through public lectures that were in large part held by members of the Vienna Circle.[11]

In 1929 the Vienna Circle made its first public appearance under this name – invented by Neurath[12] – with the publication of its manifesto Wissenschaftliche Weltauffassung. Der Wiener Kreis (The Scientific Conception of the World. The Vienna Circle also known as Viewing the World Scientifically: The Vienna Circle[13]) The pamphlet is dedicated to Schlick, and its preface was signed by Hahn, Neurath and Carnap.

The manifesto was presented at the Tagung für Erkenntnislehre der exakten Wissenschaften (Conference on the Epistemology of the Exact Sciences) in autumn 1929, organized by the Vienna Circle together with the Berlin Circle. This conference was the first international appearance of logical empiricism and the first of a number of conferences: Königsberg (1930), Prague (1934), Paris (1935), Copenhague (1936), Cambridge, UK (1938), Cambridge, Mass. (1939), and Chicago (1941).

While primarily known for its views on the natural sciences and metaphysics, the public phase of the Vienna Circle was explicitly political. Neurath and Hahn were both socialists and believed the rejection of magic was a necessary component for liberation of the working classes. The manifesto linked Karl Marx and Friedrich Nietzsche to their political and anti-metaphysical views, indicating a blur between what are now considered two separate schools of contemporary philosophy – analytic philosophy and continental philosophy.[14]

In 1930 the Vienna Circle and the Berlin Society took over the journal Annalen der Philosophie and made it the main journal of logical empiricism under the title Erkenntnis, edited by Carnap and Reichenbach. In addition, the Vienna Circle published a number of book series: Schriften zur wissenschaftlichen Weltauffassung (Monographs on the Scientific World-Conception, ed. by Schlick und Frank, 1928–1937),[15] Einheitswissenschaft (Unified Science, edited by Neurath, 1933–1939), and later the International Encyclopedia of Unified Science (edited by Neurath, Carnap and Charles W. Morris, 1938–1970).

Disintegration, emigration, internationalization (1934–1938)

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From the beginning of the 1930s the first signs of disintegration appeared for political and racist reasons: Herbert Feigl left Austria in 1930. Carnap was appointed to a chair at Prague University in 1931 and left for Chicago in 1935.

1934 marks an important break: Hahn died after surgery, Neurath fled to Holland because of the victory of Austrofascism in the Austrian Civil War following which the Ernst Mach Society was dissolved for political reasons by the Schuschnigg regime.

The murder of Moritz Schlick by the former student Hans Nelböck for political and personal reasons in 1936 set an end to the meetings of the Schlick Circle.[16]

Some members of the circle such as Kraft, Waismann, Zilsel, Menger and Gomperz continued to meet occasionally. But the annexation of Austria to Nazi Germany in 1938 meant the definite end of the activities of the Vienna Circle in Austria.[17]

With the emigration went along the internationalization of logical empiricism. Many former members of the Vienna Circle and the Berlin Circle emigrated to the English-speaking world where they had an immense influence on the development of philosophy of science. The unity of science movement for the construction of an International Encyclopedia of Unified Science, promoted mainly by Neurath, Carnap, and Morris, is symptomatic of the internationalization of logical empiricism, organizing numerous international conferences and the publication of the International Encyclopedia of Unified Science.[18]

Overview of the members

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Apart from the central figures of the Schlick Circle the question of membership in the Vienna Circle is in many cases unsettled. The partition into "members" and "those sympathetic to the Vienna Circle" produced in the manifesto from 1929 is representative only of a specific moment in the development of the Circle.[19] Depending on the criteria used (regular attendance, philosophical affinities etc.) there are different possible distributions in "inner circle" and "periphery".

In the following list (in alphabetical order), the "inner circle" is defined using the criterion of regular attendance. The "periphery" comprises occasional visitors, foreign visitors and leading intellectual figures who stood in regular contact with the Circle (such as Wittgenstein and Popper).[20]

Inner Circle: Gustav Bergmann, Rudolf Carnap, Herbert Feigl, Philipp Frank, Kurt Gödel, Hans Hahn, Olga Hahn-Neurath, Béla Juhos, Felix Kaufmann, Victor Kraft, Karl Menger, Richard von Mises, Otto Neurath, Rose Rand, Josef Schächter, Moritz Schlick, Friedrich Waismann, Edgar Zilsel.

Periphery: Alfred Jules Ayer, Egon Brunswik, Karl Bühler, Josef Frank, Else Frenkel-Brunswik, Heinrich Gomperz, Carl Gustav Hempel, Eino Kaila, Hans Kelsen, Charles W. Morris, Arne Naess, Karl Raimund Popper, Willard Van Orman Quine, Frank P. Ramsey, Hans Reichenbach, Kurt Reidemeister, Alfred Tarski, Olga Taussky-Todd, Ludwig Wittgenstein.

Reception in the United States and the United Kingdom

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The spread of logical positivism in the United States occurred throughout the 1920s and 1930s. In 1929 and in 1932, Schlick was a visiting professor at Stanford, while Feigl, who immigrated to the United States in 1930, became lecturer (1931) and professor (1933) at the University of Iowa. The definite diffusion of logical positivism in the United States was due to Carl Hempel, Hans Reichenbach, Rudolf Carnap, Philipp Frank, and Herbert Feigl, who emigrated and taught in the United States.[21][22][23]

Another link to the United States is Willard Van Orman Quine, who traveled in 1932 and 1933 as a Sheldon Traveling Fellow to Vienna, Prague, and Warsaw. Moreover, American semiotician and philosopher Charles W. Morris helped many German and Austrian philosophers emigrate to the United States, including Rudolf Carnap, in 1936.

In the United Kingdom it was Alfred Jules Ayer who acquainted the British academia with the work of the Vienna Circle with his book Language, Truth, and Logic (1936). Karl Popper was also important for the reception and critique of their work, even though he never participated in the meetings of the Vienna Circle.

Congresses and publications

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The Vienna Circle was very active in advertising their new philosophical ideas. Several congresses on epistemology and philosophy of science were organized, with the help of the Berlin Circle. There were some preparatory congresses: Prague (1929), Königsberg (1930), Prague (1934) and then the first congress on scientific philosophy held in Paris (1935), followed by congresses in Copenhagen (1936), Paris (1937), Cambridge, UK (1938), Cambridge, Massachusetts. (1939). The Königsberg congress (1930) was very important, for Kurt Gödel announced that he had proven the completeness of first-order logic and the incompleteness of formal arithmetic. Another very interesting congress was the one held in Copenhagen (1936), which was dedicated to quantum physics and causality.

Between 1928 and 1937, the Vienna Circle published ten books in a collection named Schriften zur wissenschaftlichen Weltauffassung (Monographs on the Scientific World-Conception), edited by Schlick and Frank. Karl Raimund Popper's book Logik der Forschung was published in this collection. Seven works were published in another collection, called Einheitswissenschaft (Unified Science). In 1930 Rudolf Carnap and Hans Reichenbach undertook the editorship of the journal Erkenntnis, which was published between 1930 and 1940 (from 1939 the editors were Otto Neurath, Rudolf Carnap and Charles Morris).

The following is the list of works published in the two collections edited by the Vienna Circle.

Schriften zur wissenschaftlichen Weltauffassung (Monographs on the Scientific World-Conception), edited by Schlick and Frank:

  • Richard von Mises, Wahrscheinlichkeit, Statistik und Wahrheit, 1928 (Probability, Statistics, and Truth, New York: Macmillan company, 1939)
  • Rudolf Carnap, Abriss der Logistik, 1929
  • Moritz Schlick, Fragen der Ethik, 1930 (Problems of Ethics, New York: Prentice-Hall, 1939)
  • Otto Neurath, Empirische Soziologie, 1931
  • Philipp Frank, Das Kausalgesetz und seine Grenzen, 1932 (The Law of Causality and its Limits, Dordrecth; Boston: Kluwer, 1997)
  • Otto Kant, Zur Biologie der Ethik, 1932
  • Rudolf Carnap, Logische Syntax der Sprache, 1934 (The Logical Syntax of Language, New York: Humanities, 1937)
  • Karl Raimund Popper, Logik der Forschung, 1934 (The Logic of Scientific Discovery, New York: Basic Books, 1959)
  • Josef Schächter, Prolegomena zu einer kritischen Grammatik, 1935 (Prolegomena to a Critical Grammar, Dordrecht; Boston: D. Reidel Pub. Co., 1973)
  • Victor Kraft, Die Grundlagen einer wissenschaftliche Wertlehre, 1937 (Foundations for a Scientific Analysis of Value, Dordrecht; Boston: D. Reidel Pub. Co., 1981)

Einheitswissenschaft (Unified Science), edited by Carnap, Frank, Hahn, Neurath, Jørgensen (after Hahn's death), Morris (from 1938):

  • Hans Hahn, Logik, Mathematik und Naturerkennen, 1933
  • Otto Neurath, Einheitswissenschaft und Psychologie, 1933
  • Rudolf Carnap, Die Aufgabe der Wissenschaftlogik, 1934
  • Philipp Frank, Das Ende der mechanistischen Physik, 1935
  • Otto Neurath, Was bedeutet rationale Wirtschaftsbetrachtung, 1935
  • Otto Neurath, E. Brunswik, C. Hull, G. Mannoury, J. Woodger, Zur Enzyklopädie der Einheitswissenschaft. Vorträge, 1938
  • Richard von Mises, Ernst Mach und die empiristische Wissenschaftauffassung, 1939

These works are translated in Unified Science: The Vienna Circle Monograph Series Originally Edited by Otto Neurath, Kluwer, 1987.

Monographs, arranged in chronological order, published in the International Encyclopedia of Unified Science:

  • Otto Neurath, Niels Bohr, John Dewey, Bertrand Russell, Rudolf Carnap, Charles Morris, Encyclopedia and unified science, 1938, vol.1 n.1
  • Charles Morris, Foundations of the theory of signs, 1938, vol.1 n.2
  • Victor Lenzen, Procedures of empirical sciences, 1938, vol.1 n.5
  • Rudolf Carnap, Foundations of logic and mathematics, 1939, vol.1 n.3
  • Leonard Bloomfield, Linguistic aspects of science, 1939, vol.1 n.4
  • Ernest Nagel, Principles of the theory of probability, 1939, vol.1 n.6
  • John Dewey, Theory of valuation, 1939, vol.2 n.4
  • Giorgio de Santillana and Edgar Zilsel, The development of rationalism and empiricism, 1941, vol.2 n.8
  • Otto Neurath, Foundations of social sciences, 1944, vol.2 n.1
  • Joseph H. Woodger, The technique of theory construction, 1949, vol.2 n.5
  • Philipp Frank, Foundations of physics, 1946, vol.1 n.7
  • Erwin Finlay-Freundlich, Cosmology, 1951, vol.1 n.8
  • Jørgen Jørgensen, The development of logical empiricism, 1951, vol.2 n.9
  • Egon Brunswik, The conceptual framework of psychology, 1952, vol.1 n.10
  • Carl Hempel, Fundamentals of concept formation in empirical science, 1952, vol.2 n.7
  • Felix Mainx, Foundations of biology, 1955, vol.1 n.9
  • Abraham Edel, Science and the structure of ethics, 1961, vol.2 n.3
  • Thomas S. Kuhn, The structure of scientific revolutions, 1962, vol.2 n.2
  • Gerhard Tintner, Methodology of mathematical economics and econometrics, 1968, vol.2 n.6
  • Herbert Feigl and Charles Morris, Bibliography and index, 1969, vol.2 n.10

Topics and debates

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The Vienna Circle cannot be assigned one single philosophy. First, there existed a plurality of philosophical positions within the Circle, and second, members often changed their views fundamentally in the course of time and in reaction to discussions in the Circle. It thus seems more convenient to speak of "the philosophies (in the plural) of the Vienna Circle".[24]

However, some central topics and debates can be identified.

The Manifesto (1929)

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This states the scientific world-conception of the Vienna Circle, which is characterized "essentially by two features.[25] First it is empiricist and positivist: there is knowledge only from experience. Second, the scientific world-conception is marked by the application of a certain method, namely logical analysis."[26]

Logical analysis is the method of clarification of philosophical problems; it makes an extensive use of symbolic logic and distinguishes the Vienna Circle empiricism from earlier versions. The task of philosophy lies in the clarification—through the method of logical analysis—of problems and assertions.

Logical analysis shows that there are two different kinds of statements; one kind includes statements reducible to simpler statements about the empirically given; the other kind includes statements which cannot be reduced to statements about experience and thus they are devoid of meaning. Metaphysical statements belong to this second kind and therefore they are meaningless. Hence many philosophical problems are rejected as pseudo-problems which arise from logical mistakes, while others are re-interpreted as empirical statements and thus become the subject of scientific inquiries.

One source of the logical mistakes that are at the origins of metaphysics is the ambiguity of natural language. "Ordinary language for instance uses the same part of speech, the substantive, for things ('apple') as well as for qualities ('hardness'), relations ('friendship'), and processes ('sleep'); therefore it misleads one into a thing-like conception of functional concepts".[27] Another source of mistakes is "the notion that thinking can either lead to knowledge out of its own resources without using any empirical material, or at least arrive at new contents by an inference from given states of affair".[28] Synthetic knowledge a priori is rejected by the Vienna Circle. Mathematics, which at first sight seems an example of necessarily valid synthetic knowledge derived from pure reason alone, has instead a tautological character, that is its statements are analytical statements, thus very different from Kantian synthetic statements. The only two kinds of statements accepted by the Vienna Circle are synthetic statements a posteriori (i.e., scientific statements) and analytic statements a priori (i.e., logical and mathematical statements).

However, the persistence of metaphysics is connected not only with logical mistakes but also with "social and economical struggles".[29] Metaphysics and theology are allied to traditional social forms, while the group of people who "faces modern times, rejects these views and takes its stand on the ground of empirical sciences".[29] Thus the struggle between metaphysics and scientific world-conception is not only a struggle between different kinds of philosophies, but it is also—and perhaps primarily—a struggle between different political, social, and economical attitudes. Of course, as the manifesto itself acknowledged, "not every adherent of the scientific world-conception will be a fighter".[30] Many historians of the Vienna Circle see in the latter sentence an implicit reference to a contrast between the so-called 'left wing' of the Vienna Circle, mainly represented by Neurath and Carnap, and Moritz Schlick. The aim of the left wing was to facilitate the penetration of the scientific world-conception in "the forms of personal and public life, in education, upbringing, architecture, and the shaping of economic and social life".[31] In contrast, Schlick was primarily interested in the theoretical study of science and philosophy. Perhaps the sentence "Some, glad of solitude, will lead a withdrawn existence on the icy slopes of logic" is an ironic reference to Schlick.[29]

The manifesto lists Walter Dubislav, Josef Frank, Kurt Grelling, Hasso Härlen, Eino Kaila, Heinrich Loewy, F. P. Ramsey, Hans Reichenbach, Kurt Reidemeister, and Edgar Zilsel as people "sympathetic to the Vienna Circle" and Albert Einstein, Bertrand Russell, and Ludwig Wittgenstein as "leading representatives of the scientific world-conception".

Unified science

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The final goal pursued by the Vienna Circle was unified science, that is the construction of a "constitutive system" in which every legitimate statement is reduced to the concepts of lower level which refer directly to the given experience. "The endeavour is to link and harmonise the achievements of individual investigators in their various fields of science".[32] From this aim follows the search for clarity, neatness, and for a symbolic language that eliminates the problems arising from the ambiguity of natural language. The Vienna Circle published a collection, called Einheitswissenschaft (Unified Science), edited by Rudolf Carnap, Philipp Frank, Hans Hahn, Otto Neurath, Jørgen Jørgensen (after Hahn's death) and Charles W. Morris (from 1938), whose aim was to present a unified vision of science. After the publication in Europe of seven monographs from 1933 to 1939, the collection was dismissed, because of the problems arising from the World War II. In 1938 a new series of publications started in the United States. It was the International Encyclopedia of Unified Science, an ambitious project never completed devoted to unified science. Only the first section Foundations of the Unity of Sciences was published; it contains two volumes for a total of twenty monographs published from 1938 to 1969. As remembered by Rudolf Carnap and Charles Morris in the Preface to the 1969 edition of the International Encyclopedia of Unified Science:

The Encyclopedia was in origin the idea of Otto Neurath. It was meant as a manifestation of the unity of science movement [...] Original plans for the Encyclopedia were ambitious. In addition to the two introductory volumes, there was to be a section on the methodology of the sciences, one on the existing state of the unification of sciences, and possibly a section on the application of the sciences. It was planned that the work in its entirety would comprise about twenty-six volumes (260 monographs)

— Foundations of the Unity of Sciences, vol. 1, The University of Chicago Press, 1969, p. vii.

Thomas Kuhn's well known work, The Structure of Scientific Revolutions, was published in this Encyclopedia in 1962, as the number two in the second volume.

Critique of metaphysics

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The attitude of Vienna Circle towards metaphysics is well expressed by Carnap in the article 'Überwindung der Metaphysik durch Logische Analyse der Sprache' in Erkenntnis, vol. 2, 1932 (English translation 'The Elimination of Metaphysics Through Logical Analysis of Language' in Sarkar, Sahotra, ed., Logical empiricism at its peak: Schlick, Carnap, and Neurath, New York : Garland Pub., 1996, pp. 10–31). A language—says Carnap—consists of a vocabulary, i.e., a set of meaningful words, and a syntax, i.e., a set of rules governing the formation of sentences from the words of the vocabulary. Pseudo-statements, i.e., sequences of words that at first sight resemble statements but in reality have no meaning, are formed in two ways: either meaningless words occur in them, or they are formed in an invalid syntactical way. According to Carnap, pseudo-statements of both kinds occur in metaphysics.

A word W has a meaning if two conditions are satisfied. First, the mode of the occurrence of W in its elementary sentence form (i.e., the simplest sentence form in which W is capable of occurring) must be fixed. Secondly, if W occurs in an elementary sentence S, it is necessary to give an answer to the following questions (that are—according to Carnap—equivalent formulation of the same question):

  • What sentences is S deducible from, and what sentences are deducible from S?
  • Under what conditions is S supposed to be true, and under what conditions false?
  • How is S verified?
  • What is the meaning of S?

(Carnap, "The Elimination of Metaphysics Through Logical Analysis of Language" in Sarkar, Sahotra 1996, p. 12)

An example offered by Carnap concerns the word 'arthropod'. The sentence form "the thing x is an arthropod" is an elementary sentence form that is derivable from "x is an animal", "x has a segmented body" and "x has jointed legs". Conversely, these sentences are derivable from "the thing x is an arthropod". Thus the meaning of the word 'arthropod' is determined.

According to Carnap, many words of metaphysics do not fulfill these requirements and thus they are meaningless. As an example, Carnap considers the word 'principle'. This word has a definite meaning, if the sentence "x is the principle of y" is supposed to be equivalent to the sentence "y exists by virtue of x" or "y arises out of x". The latter sentence is perfectly clear: y arises out of x when x is invariably followed by y, and the invariable association between x and y is empirically verifiable. But—says Carnap—metaphysicians are not satisfied with this interpretation of the meaning of 'principle'. They assert that no empirical relation between x and y can completely explain the meaning of "x is the principle of y", because there is something that cannot be grasped by means of the experience, something for which no empirical criterion can be specified. It is the lacking of any empirical criterion—says Carnap—that deprives of meaning the word 'principle' when it occurs in metaphysics. Therefore, metaphysical pseudo-statements such as "water is the principle of the world" or "the spirit is the principle of the world" are void of meaning because a meaningless word occurs in them.

However, there are pseudo-statements in which occur only meaningful words; these pseudo-statements are formed in a counter-syntactical way. An example is the word sequence "Caesar is a prime number"; every word has a definite meaning, but the sequence has no meaning. The problem is that "prime number" is a predicate of numbers, not a predicate of human beings. In the example the nonsense is evident; however, in natural language the rules of grammar do not prohibit the formation of analogous meaningless word sequences that are not so easily detectable. In the grammar of natural languages, every sequence of the kind "x is y", where x is a noun and y is a predicate, is acceptable. In fact, in the grammar there is no distinction between predicate which can be affirmed of human beings and predicate which can be affirmed of numbers. So "Caesar is a general" and "Caesar is a prime number" are both well-formed, in contrast for example with "Caesar is and", which is ill-formed. In a logically constructed language—says Carnap—a distinction between the various kinds of predicate is specified, and pseudo-statements as "Caesar is a prime number" are ill-formed. Now, and this is the main point of Carnap's argument, metaphysical statements in which meaningless words do not occur, are indeed meaningless because they are formed in a way which is admissible in natural languages, but not in logically constructed languages. Carnap attempts to indicate the most frequent sources of errors from which metaphysical pseudo-statements can arise. One source of mistakes is the ambiguity of the verb "to be", which is sometimes used as a copula ("I am hungry"), and sometimes to designate existence ("I am"). The latter statement incorrectly suggests a predicative form, and thus it suggests that existence is a predicate. Only modern logic, with the introduction of an explicit sign to designate existence (the sign ), which occurs only in statements such as , never as a predicate, has shown that existence is not a predicate, and thus has revealed the logical error from which pseudo-statements such as "cogito, ergo sum" has arisen.

Another source of mistakes is type confusions, in which a predicate of a kind is used as a predicate of another kind. For example, the pseudo-statements "we know the Nothing" is analogous to "we know the rain", but while the latter is well-formed, the former is ill-formed, at least in a logically constructed language, because "Nothing" is incorrectly used as a noun. In a formal language, "Nothing" only means , such as "there is nothing which is outside"—i.e., , and thus "Nothing" never occurs as a noun or as a predicate.

According to Carnap, although metaphysics has no theoretical content, it does have content: metaphysical pseudo-statements express the attitude of a person towards life, and this is the role of metaphysics. He compares it to an art like lyrical poetry; the metaphysician works with the medium of the theoretical; he confuses art with science, attitude towards life with knowledge, and thus produces an unsatisfactory and inadequate work. "Metaphysicians are musicians without musical ability".[33]

Institute Vienna Circle / Vienna Circle Society

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In 1991 the Institute Vienna Circle (IVC) was established as a society in Vienna. It is dedicated to studying the work and influence of the Vienna Circle. In 2011 it was integrated in the University of Vienna as a subunit of the Faculty of Philosophy and Education.[34] Since 2016 the former society continues its activities in close cooperation with the IVC under the changed name Vienna Circle Society (VCS).[35] In 2015 the institute co-organized an exhibition on the Vienna Circle in the main building of the University of Vienna.[36]

See also

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Notes

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Bibliography

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
The Vienna Circle (Wiener Kreis) was a group of early twentieth-century philosophers, mathematicians, and scientists based in who sought to reconceptualize through logical analysis, emphasizing empirical verifiability as the criterion of meaningful statements and rejecting metaphysics as nonsensical. Founded informally around 1924 under the leadership of , a professor of at the , the Circle included key figures such as , , Hans Hahn, and later , along with associates like Philipp Frank and Herbert Feigl. Their weekly meetings at the university fostered discussions on the foundations of science, influenced by recent advances in logic, relativity, and , as well as the works of and . Central to their doctrines was the principle of verification, which held that statements are cognitively meaningful only if empirically testable or tautological, leading to a program for the wherein all knowledge claims reduce to a physicalist grounded in observation protocols. In their 1929 manifesto, The Scientific Conception of the World, Carnap, Hahn, and Neurath articulated aims to eliminate metaphysical pseudoproblems through logical clarification and to construct a unified empirical free from speculative , viewing metaphysics not as false but as lacking propositional content akin to poetry or ethical expressions. Activities extended beyond meetings to include the founding of the Ernst Mach Society in 1928 for public outreach, the journal Erkenntnis in 1930, and the International Encyclopedia of Unified Science series, which promoted interdisciplinary synthesis. The Circle's influence peaked through international congresses on the (1929–1941) but waned after Schlick's in 1936 by a deranged student, amid Austria's political instability and the rise of National Socialism, which prompted mass emigration of Jewish and left-leaning members to the and elsewhere. This transplanted logical to Anglo-American academia, profoundly shaping postwar of science, though later critiques highlighted limitations in their and .

Historical Origins and Evolution

Precursors and Early Formation (1907–1924)

The intellectual precursors to the Vienna Circle arose in early 20th-century Vienna amid a tradition of empiricist philosophy, particularly through the influence of physicist and philosopher , who held the chair of philosophy of inductive sciences at the from 1864 to 1901 and advocated a sensation-based that rejected unobservable metaphysical entities in favor of verifiable empirical elements. Mach's works, such as The Analysis of Sensations (1886), emphasized that scientific concepts derive solely from sensory experience, impacting subsequent thinkers by promoting a neutral monism that dissolved traditional distinctions between physical and mental phenomena. This framework, combined with Ludwig Boltzmann's probabilistic approach to physics, fostered skepticism toward absolute theories and encouraged rigorous analysis of scientific foundations among Vienna's academic youth. From approximately 1907 to 1912, an informal precursor group—retrospectively called the "First Vienna Circle"—convened weekly in Viennese coffee houses, including , comprising mathematician Hans Hahn, physicist Philipp Frank, and social philosopher , all in their mid-20s and early academic careers. These Thursday evening sessions focused on Machian , critiques of Kantian metaphysics, and efforts to align with advancing sciences like relativity and quantum theory, often debating whether non-empirical statements held cognitive meaning. (1914–1918) halted these gatherings, with participants dispersed—Neurath to planning, Frank to German physics, and Hahn to limited university roles—but their shared commitment to anti-metaphysical persisted. Postwar resumption occurred amid Austria's economic turmoil, with Hahn appointed full professor of mathematics at the in 1921, where he organized seminars on logic and that bridged prewar ideas with emerging formal methods. In October 1922, assumed the University of Vienna's chair of philosophy of the inductive sciences, previously occupied by Boltzmann until his 1906 , bringing his epistemological writings on , time, and —rooted in Einstein's relativity—to local discussions. Schlick promptly initiated small, invitation-only meetings at his Boltzmanngasse apartment, attended initially by Hahn, Neurath, and a handful of others, to examine Ludwig Wittgenstein's (1921) and its implications for language, logic, and empirical verification, marking the transition from scattered precursors to organized formation. By late 1924, these sessions had expanded, incorporating broader participation and solidifying the group's core orientation toward logical empiricism.

Consolidation and Public Activities (1924–1934)

Following Moritz Schlick's appointment as professor of philosophy at the in 1922, the group began holding informal discussion meetings that solidified into regular sessions by 1924, focusing on , logic, and . These gatherings, typically at Schlick's apartment on the Boltzmanngasse, involved core participants including mathematician Hans Hahn and economist , with physicist Philipp Frank and logician occasionally attending. By 1926, had joined after relocating to Vienna, contributing to discussions on the logical structure of scientific language and the elimination of metaphysics. This period saw internal consolidation through protocols like Friedrich Waismann's 1929 "Thesen," which outlined key tenets such as , though it drew mixed responses within the group for its bold anti-metaphysical stance. The shift to public activities commenced in 1929 with the establishment of the Verein Ernst Mach, a formal association named after that served as the group's legal and organizational framework. This entity enabled outreach, including a series of public lectures in that introduced the Circle's scientific to broader audiences, emphasizing empirical verifiability over speculative . Concurrently, the group published its manifesto, Wissenschaftliche Weltauffassung: Der Wiener Kreis, which summarized their commitment to unified science, probability-based confirmation, and rejection of non-cognitive statements, though Schlick distanced himself from its polemical tone. Further public engagement included the co-founding of the journal in 1930 by Carnap and of the Berlin Circle, which reprinted the former Annalen der Philosophie to disseminate logical empiricist works across . The journal featured articles on topics like protocol sentences and , fostering international dialogue with figures such as Alfred Ayer and . By 1934, these efforts culminated in preparations for the first International Congress on the in , signaling the Circle's growing influence amid rising political tensions in .

Dissolution and Emigration (1934–1938)

In 1934, the Vienna Circle faced initial setbacks amid Austria's shift toward Austrofascism following Chancellor Engelbert Dollfuss's suppression of the socialist uprising in February, known as the Februarkämpfe. The Society, an associated public lecture series linked to the Circle, was banned by the regime, reflecting pressures on groups perceived as aligned with leftist or secular ideas. Founding member Hans Hahn died that year, further weakening the group's structure, while , a prominent socialist sympathizer, fled to the to evade political persecution. The murder of on June 22, 1936, marked a decisive blow to the Circle's cohesion. Schlick, the group's leader, was shot by former student on the university's Philosophenstiege steps; Nelböck later claimed the act stemmed from ideological opposition to Schlick's anti-metaphysical , portraying it as a defense of traditional values amid rising . The trial, influenced by the authoritarian climate, saw Nelböck's initial conviction overturned in 1938 under Nazi rule, after he falsely alleged Schlick's Jewish ancestry, highlighting the erosion of rational discourse and . This event demoralized remaining members, halting regular meetings and accelerating individual departures, as the Circle's emphasis on empirical science clashed with the regime's Catholic and suppression of . The Austrian Anschluss on March 12, 1938, triggered mass emigration as Nazi policies targeted Jews, leftists, and perceived ideological enemies, dissolving what remained of the Circle. Of approximately 20 core members, 13 had emigrated by the outbreak of World War II, dispersing to the United States, United Kingdom, and elsewhere; for instance, Philipp Frank relocated to Harvard University, Karl Menger to the University of Notre Dame, and Friedrich Waismann to the UK. Projects like the International Encyclopedia of Unified Science, initiated in 1938, continued in exile, but the group's Vienna-based activities ceased entirely, with no members returning postwar. This exodus preserved logical empiricism abroad but severed its ties to Central European roots, influenced by both anti-Semitic purges and the incompatibility of the Circle's secular, rationalist outlook with Nazi ideology.

Core Members and Intellectual Influences

Principal Figures and Contributions

Moritz Schlick (1882–1936), a philosopher and physicist, initiated the Vienna Circle's formal meetings in 1922 upon his appointment as professor of philosophy at the University of Vienna, drawing on earlier informal discussions among figures like Hans Hahn and Philipp Frank dating to 1908–1912. As the group's leader, Schlick championed the verifiability principle, positing that cognitive meaningfulness requires empirical verifiability or is analytically true, as elaborated in his Allgemeine Erkenntnislehre (1918, expanded 1925) and essays like "Über das Fundament der Erkenntnis" (1934). His work integrated developments in relativity and quantum mechanics, advocating a correspondence theory of truth grounded in intuitive experiences, while fostering interdisciplinary dialogue on logic and science. Schlick's assassination in 1936 by a deranged student marked a turning point, accelerating the Circle's dispersal. Rudolf Carnap (1891–1970), who joined as a in 1926, became a pivotal theorist, authoring Der logische Aufbau der Welt (1928), which proposed a quasi-analytical construction of empirical knowledge from elementary experiences via logical relations, aiming to eliminate metaphysics through syntactic rigor. He co-edited the journal Erkenntnis from 1930 with , advancing logical syntax in Logische Syntax der Sprache (1934) to demarcate scientific language from pseudoproblems, later shifting toward semantics and probability in works like Meaning and Necessity (1947). Carnap's tolerance principle allowed multiple linguistic frameworks, influencing analytic philosophy's focus on formal clarification over substantive . Otto Neurath (1882–1945), a sociologist and economist active from the Circle's precursors, pushed for —the reduction of all sciences to physics-based protocols—and unified science via an encyclopedic approach, as in his contributions to the 1929 manifesto Wissenschaftliche Weltauffassung. He led debates on protocol sentences, favoring holistic, intersubjective statements over atomistic ones, and applied logical empiricism to social planning, including his "ship of Neurath" for revision amid empirical . Neurath organized the movement and International Encyclopedia of Unified Science, emphasizing practical, anti-metaphysical . Supporting members included mathematician Hans Hahn (1879–1934), who co-founded early meetings and contributed to discussions on ; physicist Philipp Frank (1884–1966), bridging relativity with ; and (1906–1978), whose incompleteness theorems (1931) challenged formalist ambitions, though he critiqued . Herbert Feigl (1902–1988) and Friedrich Waismann extended ideas on probability and ethics, while Victor Kraft chronicled the group in Der Wiener Kreis (1950). These figures collectively advanced logical empiricism through rigorous analysis, prioritizing observable protocols over speculative philosophy.

Broader Networks and External Inspirations

The Vienna Circle drew significant external inspiration from Ernst Mach's empirio-criticism, which emphasized the analysis of sensations over metaphysical entities and critiqued unobservable theoretical constructs in physics, influencing early members like Philipp Frank and through works such as The Analysis of Sensations (1886). Mach's ideas aligned with the Circle's anti-metaphysical stance, though not without tensions, as Mach's was later refined amid internal debates on protocol sentences. Bertrand Russell's and collaborative work with in (1910–1913) provided foundational tools for the Circle's emphasis on logical analysis and verifiable propositions, promoting "piecemeal, detailed and verifiable results" over speculative generalities. Ludwig Wittgenstein's (1921), with its dictum "What can be said at all, can be said clearly, and what we cannot speak about we must pass over in silence," catalyzed the Circle's and view of metaphysics as nonsensical, prompting to invite Wittgenstein to private discussions starting in 1927. The Circle maintained networks with the Circle (or Society for Empirical Philosophy), led by and including Kurt Grelling, sharing commitments to scientific but diverging in emphasis— prioritizing probability and influenced by Russell, while Vienna leaned toward Wittgensteinian logic. This collaboration culminated in the joint conference on the of the , organized by the Society and group on September 15–16, 1929, marking an early step toward broader international efforts. The explicitly sought contacts with "living movements" beyond , fostering exchanges that extended to Nordic philosophers and Polish logicians like in later years.

Philosophical Doctrines

Logical Empiricism and Verificationism

Logical empiricism, the philosophical framework central to the Vienna Circle, integrated classical empiricism with advances in symbolic logic to posit that genuine derives solely from sensory logically structured, rendering metaphysical cognitively vacuous. This maintained that meaningful propositions are either analytic—true by virtue of their logical form or definitional conventions—or synthetic and empirically verifiable through observation or experiment. The Circle's members, drawing from influences like David Hume's empiricism, Ernst Mach's positivism, and Ludwig Wittgenstein's (1921), sought to demarcate science from by applying formal logical analysis to , aiming for a unified scientific free of unverifiable claims. Verificationism constituted the cornerstone of this approach, asserting that a proposition's cognitive meaning resides in the method of its empirical verification, such that non-verifiable statements lack factual content and thus truth-value. Moritz Schlick, the Circle's founding figure, articulated this in his 1932 essay "Positivism and Realism," arguing that assertions about unobservable entities, like the far side of the moon, gain meaning only through conceivable sensory confirmation, even if deferred. He further refined it in "Meaning and Verification" (1936), equating meaning with verifiability in principle via ostensive demonstration or logical deduction from observables. Rudolf Carnap advanced the principle in Der logische Aufbau der Welt (1928), proposing a constitutional system reducing all scientific concepts to elementary experiences via logical relations, thereby excluding metaphysics as pseudo-propositions lacking empirical grounding. By the mid-1930s, internal debates prompted refinements, as strict verifiability proved overly restrictive for universal laws and theoretical terms in physics, which cannot be conclusively verified but can be partially confirmed. Carnap addressed this in Testability and Meaning (1936–1937), shifting to a confirmability criterion where statements acquire partial empirical significance through predictive consequences testable against data, allowing dispositional predicates and theoretical constructs indirect verifiability via reduction sentences. This evolution reflected the Circle's commitment to accommodating mature sciences like , while upholding the analytic-synthetic dichotomy: analytic truths, such as mathematical tautologies, hold independently of experience, whereas synthetic ones demand evidential support. The doctrine's anti-metaphysical thrust, evident in Carnap's 1932 "Elimination of Metaphysics Through Logical Analysis of Language," diagnosed traditional philosophy's ills as linguistic confusions, advocating syntax-based reconstruction to dissolve rather than resolve pseudo-problems.

Anti-Metaphysical Critique

The Vienna Circle's critique of metaphysics centered on the principle of verifiability, positing that only statements capable of empirical verification or reducible to logical tautologies possess cognitive meaning, rendering metaphysical assertions pseudopropositions devoid of truth value. This stance, articulated prominently by Rudolf Carnap in his 1932 essay "The Elimination of Metaphysics Through Logical Analysis of Language," argued that metaphysics arises from violations of logical syntax in language, producing sentences that mimic declarative form but fail to express propositions, such as Martin Heidegger's claim that "nothing nothings itself." Carnap demonstrated this through pseudo-syntactical constructions, like treating nouns without corresponding predicates as meaningless, exemplified in critiques of terms like "das Nichts" (the nothing), which evade empirical testing and logical analysis. Moritz Schlick, the Circle's founder, reinforced this by insisting philosophy's role is to clarify scientific concepts rather than engage in speculative , dismissing metaphysics as rather than rational , as seen in his 1932–1936 lectures emphasizing protocol sentences derived from immediate experience over abstract entities. extended the critique via , advocating that all meaningful statements be translatable into the language of physics to eliminate non-empirical residues, critiquing metaphysics for introducing unverifiable "myths" that hinder unified science. The 1929 Vienna Circle manifesto collectively decried metaphysics as a residue of and outdated , urging its replacement with the scientific worldview to avoid pseudo-problems like those in absolute space or substance ontologies. This rejection was not merely dismissive but analytically grounded: metaphysical claims, lacking criteria for confirmation or falsification, fail as either synthetic a posteriori (empirical) or analytic a priori (logical) judgments, distinguishing the Circle's approach from prior Humean skepticism by leveraging modern logic from Frege and Russell. Critics within philosophy noted the critique's rigor in targeting unverifiable absolutes, though later challenges, such as Quine's 1951 holism, questioned its sharp analytic-synthetic divide; nonetheless, the Circle's framework prioritized causal, observable relations over transcendental speculations.

Unified Science and Reductionism

The Vienna Circle advocated for Einheitswissenschaft (unified science) as a programmatic goal to integrate the fragmented disciplines of into a coherent, hierarchical system grounded in empirical observation and logical syntax. This vision, articulated in the Circle's 1929 manifesto The Scientific Conception of the World, emphasized linking individual scientific achievements across fields through logical analysis of empirical data, rejecting speculative metaphysics in favor of verifiable propositions. Proponents like argued that unified science would emerge not as a monolithic reduction to a single theory but as a departmentalized structure where higher-level sciences (e.g., , ) are connected deductively to foundational physical laws, preserving specialization while ensuring intertranslatability. Central to this project was methodological reductionism, which sought to derive all meaningful scientific statements from elementary experiential protocols via stepwise logical construction. Rudolf Carnap's Der logische Aufbau der Welt (1928) exemplified this by proposing a constitutional system to reconstruct the world from basic "elementary experiences" (autopsychological sensations), using Russellian logic to build complex concepts hierarchically—e.g., reducing color perceptions to relational orders before aggregating to physical objects. Initially phenomenalist, Carnap's framework shifted toward under Neurath's influence, insisting that all sciences employ a unified to avoid dualisms between observable and theoretical terms, thereby enabling reductive translations across domains. Neurath operationalized these ideas through initiatives like the Einheitswissenschaft monograph series (1933–1939), which published essays promoting physicalist reduction as a tool for scientific coordination, and the International Congresses for the (beginning 1934 in ), where members debated protocols for reducing social sciences to behavioral observables without invoking unverifiable mental states. This reductionist stance critiqued holistic or emergentist views in and , positing that apparent irreducibility stemmed from incomplete logical analysis rather than ontological novelty, though internal debates revealed tensions—e.g., Carnap later conceded that full inter-theoretic reduction might require probabilistic rather than strict deductive links. Empirical success was seen in physics' dominance, where reduced to , serving as a model for extending unity upward. Critics within and outside the Circle noted limitations: Neurath's anti-foundationalism rejected Carnap's absolute elementary basis, favoring a boat-like reconstruction of science via ongoing physicalist protocols, which risked circularity in reductions reliant on theory-laden observations. Nonetheless, unified science influenced mid-20th-century positivism by prioritizing causal explanations rooted in verifiable mechanisms over teleological or vitalist alternatives, though its strict reductionism underestimated emergent properties in complex systems like ecosystems or economies.

Internal Debates

Protocol Sentences Controversy

The protocol sentences debate within the Vienna Circle, emerging in the early , centered on the and epistemological status of the foundational empirical statements intended to ground scientific in direct . These were conceived as the indubitable basis for verification, immune to falsification by higher-level theories, yet their formulation sparked fundamental disagreements over , , and the revisability of empirical claims. The controversy highlighted tensions between individualistic phenomenal reports and intersubjective, theory-laden descriptions, ultimately challenging the Circle's foundationalist ambitions. Moritz Schlick and initially advocated for protocol sentences as phenomenological descriptions of immediate sensory experience, such as "p experiences (now) a blue square," formulated in an autopsychological or solipsistic language to capture the "given" without theoretical contamination. In his 1932 paper "Über Protokollsätze," argued that such sentences could serve as the evidential base, verifiable through ostension or direct confrontation with experience, while allowing into physicalistic terms for scientific . similarly emphasized their incorrigibility, viewing them as konstatierungen—self-authenticating assertions tied to the present moment of perception—that provided an absolute foundation against . Otto Neurath vehemently opposed this view, insisting on physicalism as the universal language of , where protocol sentences must describe observable physical events in third-person terms, such as "Otto's protocol at 3:17 p.m.: 45°C in room 17." He rejected any privileged, solipsistic "given," arguing that all statements, including protocols, are embedded in a holistic network of beliefs subject to collective revision, akin to repairing a while at sea without access to . Neurath's 1932 contributions in Erkenntnis contended that autopsychological formulations risked and failed intersubjective , advocating instead for protocols that incorporate observer details and temporal coordinates to ensure empirical comparability across scientists. The debate intensified through exchanges in and Circle protocols from 1931–1934, exposing the verification principle's internal strains: phenomenal protocols threatened privacy and unverifiability, while physicalist ones admitted theory dependence, undermining claims of foundational neutrality. Carnap conceded key points to Neurath by 1932–1934, adopting physicalist syntax for protocols in The Logical Syntax of Language (1934), which prioritized intersubjective consistency over introspective purity. This resolution bolstered the Circle's anti-metaphysical stance but presaged broader critiques of , influencing holistic beyond the group.

Ethics, Values, and Political Implications

The Vienna Circle's logical empiricists applied their verification principle to ethical statements, deeming them cognitively meaningless because they neither express empirical observations nor logical tautologies. This stance, articulated in works like Rudolf Carnap's The Elimination of Metaphysics Through Logical Analysis of (1932), treated normative claims as non-propositional, functioning instead as expressions of emotion, preference, or exhortation rather than assertions of fact. Consequently, occupied a marginal position in their philosophy, subordinated to descriptive science and viewed as outside the domain of rational inquiry or truth-evaluation. This metaethical implied that values could not be objectively grounded or scientifically validated, challenging traditional while aligning with the Circle's broader anti-metaphysical program. Figures like emphasized aesthetic and personal dimensions of value over systematic ethical theory, seeing moral judgments as subjective orientations rather than verifiable propositions. The approach prefigured later emotivist theories, such as those of , by reducing ethical discourse to psychological or imperative functions devoid of descriptive content. Politically, the Circle exhibited diversity, with "left-wing" members like Otto Neurath and Hans Hahn advocating socialism and rational social planning informed by empirical science. Neurath, a key proponent, integrated physicalism—the reduction of all meaningful statements to observational protocols—with visions of centralized economic planning, as in his 1930s proposals for a "socialist calculation debate" using scientific methods to supplant market mechanisms. He and allies like Carnap perceived an "inner link" between logical empiricism and leftist movements, arguing that demystifying metaphysics via science could liberate workers from ideological superstition and enable evidence-based policy. Hahn, similarly, tied the rejection of "magic" in knowledge to proletarian emancipation. Yet this political engagement clashed with the Circle's , as normative commitments to could not be empirically verified, raising questions about their rational justification. Neurath navigated this by framing political action as pragmatic, boat-like adjustments in an unfalsifiable empirical framework, prioritizing intersubjective scientific discourse over absolute values. More conservative members, including Schlick, maintained greater distance from , focusing on individual and amid rising . The Circle's overall anti-dogmatic ethos, rooted in Enlightenment , positioned it against both metaphysical traditionalism and totalitarian politics, though personal sympathies often leaned left in Vienna's interwar socialist milieu.

Criticisms and Limitations

Self-Undermining Aspects of Verification Principle

The verification , as articulated by Vienna Circle members such as and , held that a synthetic is meaningful only if its truth can be conclusively verified through empirical observation or, in principle, reduced to directly observable protocol sentences. This criterion aimed to demarcate scientific knowledge from metaphysics by excluding statements incapable of such verification as cognitively insignificant. A primary objection to this principle is its apparent self-undermining nature: the principle itself neither constitutes an analytic truth—since denying it does not produce a logical contradiction, akin to denying "all bachelors are unmarried"—nor can it be empirically verified, as no finite or infinite series of observations could confirm its universal applicability to all propositions without . Consequently, under its own terms, the verification qualifies as meaningless, undermining its capacity to serve as a foundational standard for dismissing non-empirical claims. Carnap sought to address this by reframing the principle not as a factual assertion about the world but as a pragmatic proposal for linguistic frameworks, exempt from empirical testing via his "principle of tolerance," which allows adoption of verificationist rules as conventions without requiring their verification. However, this maneuver shifts the doctrine toward , diluting its empiricist rigor, as the choice of framework lacks an independent justification beyond , rendering the exclusion of alternative metaphysics arbitrary rather than epistemically compelled. Later formulations, such as A.J. Ayer's weak verification in Language, Truth, and Logic (1936), conceded partial verifiability but still faced the same self-referential , as the revised criterion similarly evades direct empirical confirmation while claiming authority over meaningfulness. This internal inconsistency contributed to the Vienna Circle's doctrines falling into disrepute by the mid-20th century, as philosophers like W.V.O. Quine highlighted holism's rejection of isolated verifiability, further eroding the principle's coherence.

Methodological and Empirical Flaws

The Vienna Circle's commitment to verificationism as a methodological cornerstone encountered significant challenges from the underdetermination thesis, which posits that empirical evidence is insufficient to uniquely determine a scientific theory, as multiple theories can compatibly explain the same data. This issue, highlighted by Pierre Duhem in 1906 and extended by Willard Van Orman Quine in his 1951 critique of the analytic-synthetic distinction, undermined the Circle's ideal of isolating hypotheses for direct empirical confirmation or refutation, revealing that scientific testing occurs at the level of entire theoretical networks rather than individual statements. Consequently, the verification principle failed to provide a practical demarcation for scientific methodology, as real-world empirical tests invariably involve auxiliary assumptions that allow rival interpretations to persist. Empirically, the Circle's reductionist program—aiming to translate all meaningful statements into observational terms and unify sciences under physics—faltered due to persistent failures in achieving inter-theoretic reductions, such as deriving biological or psychological phenomena solely from physical laws without loss of explanatory power. Alan Richardson's analysis in 1998 documented these shortcomings, noting that attempts to reduce higher-level sciences encountered issues like multiple realizability, where the same observable effect arises from diverse underlying mechanisms not capturable by lower-level descriptions. For instance, the Circle's protocol sentences, intended as theory-neutral empirical reports, proved untenable in practice, as observations are laden with theoretical presuppositions, rendering pure empiricism illusory and incompatible with the actual structure of scientific inquiry. Further empirical critiques arose from the handling of theoretical entities in science, such as electrons or quarks, which the Circle initially dismissed as mere instrumental fictions lacking direct verifiability, yet which became indispensable for predictive success in physics by the mid-20th century. This tension exposed a methodological overreach: while advocating empirical , the Circle's framework could not accommodate the inferential realism required for advancing theories beyond immediate sensory data, leading to an underappreciation of how progresses through hypothetico-deductive methods rather than strict observational reduction. These flaws contributed to the doctrine's eclipse, as subsequent empirical developments in and relativity favored holistic confirmation over the Circle's atomistic verification.

Ideological Biases and Overreach

Several members of the Vienna Circle, particularly and , exhibited strong affiliations with socialist and Marxist-inspired ideologies, viewing logical empiricism as a tool for advancing social progress through scientific rationalism. , a trained political economist and key organizer of the Circle, explicitly endorsed a form of , advocating for planned economies and systems to facilitate centralized social planning, as detailed in his writings from the 1920s and 1930s. This "Left Vienna Circle" subgroup linked their anti-metaphysical philosophy to political activism, affirming an "inner link" between empirical science and leftist movements aimed at dismantling traditional hierarchies. Their 1929 manifesto referenced alongside to underscore anti-metaphysical commitments, blurring philosophical rigor with ideological critiques of and . This ideological orientation manifested in biases against non-empirical domains, such as and traditional , which were dismissed as meaningless under , effectively privileging materialist, secular worldviews aligned with progressive reforms. Neurath's advocacy for "unified science" extended beyond to prescribe scientific methods for social engineering, including his support for in-kind economies during and postwar planning initiatives, reflecting an overreach where prescribed policy without sufficient empirical validation of outcomes. Critics, including later philosophers like , argued this overreached by reducing complex social realities to verifiable protocols, ignoring emergent properties and historical contingencies that defied reductionist control. The Circle's non-cognitivist stance on values—treating ethical statements as emotive rather than truth-apt—paradoxically enabled ideological commitments, as members like Neurath pursued socialist goals under the guise of neutral science, revealing a selective application of that tolerated political advocacy while rejecting metaphysical alternatives. This overreach contributed to tensions within the group and broader intellectual resistance, as their dismissal of and metaphysics as pseudoproblems aligned with a modernist against pre-scientific traditions, potentially undermining pluralism in knowledge production. Academic assessments note that while the Circle's avoided , its entanglement with Austro-Marxism fostered an environment where scientific authority was wielded to critique conservative institutions, sometimes without rigorous testing of sociopolitical hypotheses.

Reception and Diaspora

Anglo-American Adoption and Adaptation

The emigration of Vienna Circle members to Anglo-American countries following the rise of National Socialism facilitated the transplantation of logical empiricism. Rudolf , a central figure, left Czechoslovakia for the in 1935 after receiving an invitation from philosopher Charles Morris; he joined the University of philosophy department in 1936, where he remained until 1952. Hans , another key exponent, fled to in 1933 before relocating to the in 1938, taking a position at the University of California, Los Angeles, and contributing to the integration of probabilistic approaches into empirical philosophy. These migrations, driven by political persecution, positioned European logical empiricists as influential voices in American academia, where they encountered a philosophical landscape dominated by and realism. In Britain, adoption occurred through intellectual exchange rather than mass emigration. Alfred Jules Ayer, during visits to in 1932–1933, absorbed Circle doctrines and popularized them via his 1936 book Language, Truth and Logic, which framed in accessible English terms and emphasized the rejection of metaphysics as cognitively meaningless. Ayer's work aligned closely with Circle anti-metaphysical tenets, crediting and explicitly, and it spurred interest among and philosophers, bridging continental logic with British . This publication marked an early, enthusiastic reception, transforming Vienna Circle ideas from a Central European coterie into a cornerstone of emerging in the . Adaptations emerged as Anglo-American philosophers reconciled logical empiricism with local traditions, softening strict into confirmability and probabilistic frameworks. Carnap's 1936–1937 papers "Testability and Meaning," published in the U.S., shifted focus from outright verifiability to degrees of , accommodating theoretical terms via correspondence rules and influencing of science toward hypothetico-deductive models. Reichenbach's emphasis on frequency interpretations of probability, developed in his 1935 Wahrscheinlichkeitslehre and refined in U.S. contexts, integrated inductive logic with empirical inquiry, diverging from the Circle's earlier deductivist leanings. These modifications, evident in collaborations like the 1940s movement led by Neurath and Carnap, fostered a pragmatic that prioritized scientific methodology over radical eliminativism, aligning with American while retaining anti-metaphysical rigor. By the 1940s, logical empiricism had institutionalized in Anglo-American philosophy departments, with figures like Carl Hempel at Yale from 1948 advancing covering-law models of , adapting Circle reductionism to encompass historical sciences. This era saw the formation of groups such as the Center for (founded 1953 under Herbert Feigl, a Circle associate), which synthesized European logic with Anglo-American naturalism, emphasizing of concepts like "" over pure protocol sentences. Such adaptations ensured the doctrine's viability amid critiques, embedding it deeply in analytic philosophy's focus on clarity, logic, and empirical grounding until mid-century reevaluations.

Initial Enthusiasm and Subsequent Rejection

The ideas of the Vienna Circle gained significant traction in Anglo-American philosophy during the 1930s, primarily through the dissemination efforts of émigré members and sympathetic interpreters. Rudolf Carnap's relocation to the in 1936, where he held positions at the and later UCLA, facilitated the integration of logical empiricism into American academic circles, influencing and language. Similarly, A.J. Ayer's Language, Truth and Logic (1936) served as a pivotal conduit for introducing the Circle's verification principle and anti-metaphysical stance to British philosophers, portraying as a rigorous, empirically grounded alternative to traditional and speculative metaphysics. This enthusiasm peaked in the post-World War II era, as aligned with a broader cultural shift toward and formal analysis in departments, temporarily dominating discussions on meaning, , and scientific methodology. By the late 1940s and 1950s, however, mounting internal and external critiques eroded this initial appeal, leading to the widespread rejection of core Vienna Circle doctrines. W.V.O. Quine's "" (1951) delivered a foundational blow by challenging the analytic-synthetic distinction—essential to distinguishing logical truths from empirical ones—and advocating a holistic view of empirical knowledge where no statement is confirmed in isolation, undermining the verificationist criterion of meaning. Concurrently, Carl Hempel's analyses (1950–1951) exposed paradoxes in confirmation theory, such as the inability of the verification principle to adequately demarcate scientific statements from metaphysical ones without adjustments. These flaws, compounded by the principle's apparent self-refutation (as it itself is neither analytically true nor empirically verifiable), prompted figures like Ayer to concede revisions in later editions of his work, signaling a retreat from strict . The decline accelerated in the 1960s as broader philosophical shifts, including Thomas Kuhn's (1962), highlighted non-cumulative aspects of scientific progress through paradigm shifts, contradicting the Circle's emphasis on unified, verifiable science. By the early 1960s, had largely been supplanted in Anglo-American philosophy, viewed as overly reductive and insufficiently attuned to linguistic pragmatics, historical contingencies, and the of theory by data—though remnants persisted in specialized fields like . This rejection reflected not merely technical shortcomings but a reevaluation of empiricism's scope, favoring more flexible naturalistic approaches over the Circle's austere formalism.

Legacy and Modern Assessments

Influence on Post-Positivist Philosophy

The Vienna Circle's advocacy for established foundational debates in the , including the demarcation of empirical knowledge and the role of logical analysis, which post-positivist thinkers engaged with through critique and refinement. By emphasizing verifiability as a criterion for meaningful statements, the Circle prompted responses that addressed its limitations, such as the difficulty of verifying universal laws and the self-referential issues of the verification principle itself. This reactive dynamic shaped post-positivism's emphasis on and contextual factors in scientific inquiry, retaining an empiricist orientation while rejecting strict . Karl Popper, who studied under Circle member and discussed ideas with members like Victor Kraft in the early , developed falsificationism as an alternative to in his 1934 book Logik der Forschung. Popper argued that scientific theories must be testable and potentially refutable, critiquing the Circle's and as inadequate for distinguishing science from . This demarcation criterion influenced post-positivist by prioritizing empirical risk over probabilistic support, informing later work on testing and conjecture-refutation cycles. W.V.O. Quine's 1951 paper "" directly challenged the analytic-synthetic distinction upheld by , a core Vienna Circle tenet, asserting instead a web of belief where empirical data underdetermines theory and no propositions are revisable in isolation. Quine's extended Otto Neurath's metaphor of as a repaired at sea, but rejected the Circle's reductionist hierarchy, paving the way for that integrates and . This critique eroded positivist confidence in isolated observations, fostering post-positivist views of theory-laden evidence and pragmatic adjustment. Thomas Kuhn's (1962), published in the Circle's International Encyclopedia of Unified Science series, rejected the positivist portrayal of as cumulative and logic-driven, proposing instead shifts driven by anomalies and community consensus. Influenced by Quine's but reacting against the Circle's ahistorical formalism, Kuhn highlighted incommensurability between paradigms, shifting focus to sociological and gestalt-like elements in scientific change. Post-positivists thus inherited the Circle's but incorporated historical contingency and social dynamics, as seen in subsequent debates on and .

Centenary Reflections and Revivals (2020s)

In 2024, marking the approximate centenary of the Vienna Circle's informal founding around 1924–1925, several academic events focused on reassessing its contributions to logical empiricism and philosophy of science. The Institute Vienna Circle at the University of Vienna hosted its 32nd Vienna Circle Lecture on November 28, 2024, with Massimo Ferrari of the University of Turin delivering "Moritz Schlick und sein Zirkel. Nach 100 Jahren," examining the enduring questions of Schlick's leadership and the group's methodological commitments amid modern critiques. Similarly, on July 4, 2024, a keynote event at Vienna City Hall, part of the Paul K. Feyerabend Centennial celebrations, titled "Der Wiener Kreis und seine Kritiker – Schlick-Zirkel, Popper und Feyerabend," analyzed the Circle's tensions with later falsificationist and anarchist critiques, highlighting causal and empirical limitations in verificationism. These gatherings emphasized the Circle's role in prioritizing observable data and logical reconstruction over speculative metaphysics, though participants noted systemic challenges like the verification principle's self-referential paradoxes. Further reflections occurred internationally, such as the Minnesota Center for Philosophy of Science's conference "Philosophy of Science: Past, Present and Future" from October 17–19, 2024, explicitly linking discussions to the Vienna Circle's centenary and evaluating its influence on current empirical methodologies. An upcoming 2025 conference, "The State of Research on Logical Empiricism on the 100th Anniversary of the Vienna Circle," organized by the Department of Philosophy of Nature at , aims to survey historiographical advances, including nuanced views of figures like Otto Neurath's encyclopaedism, which recent scholarship portrays as more pragmatic than rigid . These events underscore a scholarly consensus that, while the Circle's anti-metaphysical stance faced rejection in mid-20th-century for overemphasizing verifiability at the expense of theoretical , its insistence on evidence-based reasoning retains value in addressing pseudoscientific claims prevalent in contemporary debates. No widespread revival of logical positivism has materialized in the 2020s, as its core tenets—such as the verifiability criterion—remain undermined by internal inconsistencies and empirical counterexamples, including in and historical sciences. However, selective elements persist in and data-intensive fields; for instance, a 2024 assessment highlights logical empiricism's influence on , where empirical verification aligns with machine learning's reliance on testable datasets, corroborated by the 2020 Survey showing 12% of philosophers endorsing logical empiricism. This echoes broader 2020s trends toward causal realism in , where Circle-inspired tools like formal semantics aid in distinguishing robust predictions from unfalsifiable narratives, though without endorsing the original movement's eliminativism toward ethics or unobservables.

Contemporary Institutions like Institute Vienna Circle

The Institute Vienna Circle (IVC), established in 1991 as an international nonprofit organization initially under the name Vienna Circle Society, serves as a primary contemporary institution dedicated to preserving and advancing the intellectual legacy of the historical Vienna Circle. Founded by philosopher Friedrich Stadler, who served as its long-time director, the IVC operates without political affiliation and focuses on fostering research into logical empiricism, interdisciplinary integration of philosophy with history and sociology of science, and critical examination of scientific worldviews. Integrated as a department within the Faculty of Philosophy and Education at the University of Vienna since around 2010, it supports philosophical projects responsive to developments in individual sciences, documentation of historical materials, and the ongoing evolution of logical empiricist doctrines. Key activities of the IVC include organizing international conferences, symposia, and public research discussions; curating exhibitions on the Vienna Circle's history and influence; and producing scholarly outputs such as a dedicated book series, an annual yearbook, and editing projects on primary sources. These efforts emphasize empirical and logical over speculative metaphysics, aligning with the original Circle's emphasis on verifiable knowledge, while collaborating with the University of Vienna's Department of Philosophy to host fellowships for junior and senior researchers. Under current head Georg Schiemer, the institute maintains an active role in of , including summer schools and events that reassess the Circle's contributions amid modern debates in and scientific methodology. While the IVC stands as the most direct institutional successor in , other entities influenced by the Circle's , such as the Minnesota Center for Philosophy of Science—founded with input from logical empiricists like Herbert Feigl—continue indirect legacies through research centers focused on philosophy of science, though without the same explicit ties to the original group's Viennese context. These institutions collectively sustain interest in the Circle's verificationist principles and anti-metaphysical stance, adapting them to address current challenges like the integration of formal logic with empirical data in fields ranging from physics to social sciences.

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