Herbert Feigl
Herbert Feigl (December 14, 1902, Liberec, Czech Republic - June 1, 1988, Minneapolis, USA) was an Austrian philosopher and a member of the Vienna Circle.
Related Topics:
December 14 - 1902 - Liberec - Czech Republic - June 1 - 1988 - Minneapolis - USA - Austrian - Vienna Circle
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The son of a weaver, Feigl was born in Liberec (Reichenberg), Bohemia (then Austria-Hungary, now Czech Republic) and matriculated at the University of Vienna in 1922. He studied physics and philosophy under Moritz Schlick, the founder of the Vienna Circle, and received his doctorate in 1927 for the essay "Chance and Law: An Epistemological Analysis of the Roles of Probability and Induction in the Natural Sciences." He published his first book, Theory and Experience in Physics, in 1929. He became an active member in the Vienna Circle during this time: he was one of the few Circle members (along with Schlick and Friedrich Waismann) to have extensive conversations with Ludwig Wittgenstein and Karl Popper.
Related Topics:
Liberec - Bohemia - Austria-Hungary - Czech Republic - University of Vienna - 1922 - Physics - Philosophy - Moritz Schlick - 1927 - 1929 - Friedrich Waismann - Ludwig Wittgenstein - Karl Popper
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In 1930, on an International Rockefeller Scholarship at Harvard University, Feigl he met the physicist Percy Williams Bridgman, the philosopher Willard Van Orman Quine, and the psychologist Stanley Smith Stevens, all of whom he saw as kindred spirits. In a 1931 paper with Albert Blumberg, "Logical Positivism: A New European Movement," he argued for logical positivism to be re-named "logical empiricism" based upon certain realist differences between contemporary philosophy of science and the older positivist movement.
Related Topics:
1930 - Rockefeller - Harvard University - Percy Williams Bridgman - Willard Van Orman Quine - Stanley Smith Stevens - 1931 - Albert Blumberg - Logical Positivism - Realist - Philosophy of science - Positivist
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In 1931, Feigl married Maria Kaspar and emigrated with her to the United States, settling in Iowa to take up a position in the philosophy department at the University of Iowa. In 1940, he accepted a position as professor of philosophy at the University of Minnesota, where he remained for 31 years. His close professional and personal relationship with Wilfrid Sellars produced many different collaborative projects, including the textbook Readings in Philosophical Analysis and the journal Philosophical Studies, which he and Sellars founded in 1949. In 1953, with a grant from the Hill Foundation, he established the Minnesota Center for Philosophy of Science. He was appointed Regents Professor of the University of Minnesota in 1967.
Related Topics:
University of Iowa - 1940 - University of Minnesota - Wilfrid Sellars - 1949 - 1953 - 1967
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Feigl retired in 1971 and died of cancer on June 1, 1988 in Minneapolis.
Related Topics:
1971 - Cancer - 1988 - Minneapolis
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