- Johann Nelböck
Dr Johann Nelböck (1903–1954) was a former student of
Moritz Schlick , the founder of the group of philosophers and scientists known as theVienna Circle .On
June 22 ,1936 , Nelböck, who had already twice been committed to a psychiatric ward for threatening Schlick, shot him in the chest and killed him on the central staircase of theUniversity of Vienna .Although a German
Protestant from minorPrussia n nobility, Schlick was subsequently characterized in the press as a pivotal figure in disaffectedJew ish circles, and the murder was applauded byVienna 's Nazis, immediately becoming a "cause célèbre ".At Nelböck's trial for the murder of Schlick, besides some allegations of personal injuries, a significant part of his defence was the claim that Schlick's philosophical arguments had undermined his native moral restraints, a line of thought which Austrian Nazis, asserting Schlick's Jewish connections within the Vienna Circle, quickly developed and exploited, although not entirely without protest ref|1.
Nelböck was found guilty and sentenced to ten years' imprisonment, but was paroled after two. He became a member of the Austrian Nazi Party after the
Anschluss (the unification of Germany with Austria) in 1938.Notes
# de icon [http://zeit1.uibk.ac.at/quellen/stadler3.htm Correspondence for and against Schlick, reproduced from Stadler (see below)]
External links
* [http://www.oemg.ac.at/IMN/imn187.pdf Internationale Mathematische Nachrichten, Vienna 2006]
* [http://arbeitsblaetter.stangl-taller.at/WISSENSCHAFTPSYCHOLOGIE/PSYCHOLOGEN/SchlickMord.shtml Karl-Peter Schwarz: 'Das Ende des Wiener Kreises: "So Hund, jetzt hast du es"' (Die Presse 2 Nov 1997)]
* [http://www.erlangerliste.de/ressourc/postmod.html Christian Köllerer: 'Die Errungenschaften der Postmoderne als Theorie: Eine philosophische Kritik']References
* Stadler, Friedrich: "Die andere Kulturgeschichte am Beispiel von Emigration und Exil der österreichischen Intellektuellen 1930 - 1940", in: Michael Gehler/ Rolf Steininger (eds.): "Österreich im 20. Jahrhundert. Ein Studienbuch in zwei Bänden. Von der Monarchie bis zum Zweiten Weltkrieg" (Böhlau-Studien-Bücher. Grundlagen des Studiums), Wien-Köln-Weimar 1997, S.535-553.
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