- Kurt Grelling
Infobox Philosopher
region =Western Philosophy
era =20th-century philosophy
color = #B0C4DE
name = Otto Neurath
birth = birth date|1886|03|02
death = death date|1942|09|
school_tradition = Analytic
main_interests =Philosophy of science ,Logic
notable_ideas =
influences =
influenced =Berlin Circle ,Vienna Circle Kurt Grelling (
March 2 ,1886 – September, 1942) was alogician ,philosopher and member of the Berlin Circle.Life and work
Shortly after his arrival in 1905 at
University of Göttingen , Grelling began a collaboration with philosopherLeonard Nelson , with whom he tried to solveRussell's paradox , which had shaken thefoundations of mathematics when it was announced in 1903. Their 1908 paper included newparadox es, including a semantic paradox that was named theGrelling-Nelson paradox .He received his doctorate in
mathematics from the same university in 1910 with adissertation on the development ofarithmetics inaxiomatic set theory , advised byDavid Hilbert . In a recorded interview withHerbert Enderton ,Alfred Tarski mentions a meeting he had with Grelling in 1938, and says that Grelling was the author of the earliest textbook inset theory , probably but wrongly referring to this dissertation, sinceWilliam Henry Young andGrace Chisholm Young 's "Set Theory" was published in 1906.As a skilled linguist, Grelling translated philosophical works from French, Italian and English to German, including four of
Bertrand Russell 's works. He became a strong proponent of Russell's writings thereafter.From 1911 to 1922 Grelling published exclusively journalistic articles in publications connected with the
Social Democratic Party of Germany , but from 1924 onwards his publications were exclusively in the field of positivist philosophy.Unable to find a university position in
Göttingen orBerlin , Grelling had to teach mathematics,philosophy andphysics in secondary schools. Nevertheless, he worked withHans Reichenbach in planning the meetings of the Berlin Circle, which was closely associated with theVienna Circle . In 1933, Reichenbach emigrated toTurkey and the Nazis forced Grelling to retire. But he struggled to keep the Berlin Circle active by organizing small seminars and colloquia.Grelling collaborated with
Kurt Gödel and in 1936 he published an article in which he defended Gödel'sincompleteness theorem against an erroneous interpretation, according to which Gödel's theorem is a paradox as Russell's paradox (see "References").Although many of his relatives and friends had fled
Germany , he did not think seriously about leaving until 1937, in which year he went toBrussels to work withPaul Oppenheim , this time writing several papers on the analysis of scientific explanation and onGestalt psychology .On May 10th, 1940, the first day of the German invasion in
Belgium , Grelling was arrested. He was deported to southernFrance , where he was interned for over two years under theVichy regime . Oppenheim and Hempel tried to help Grelling by securing an appointment for him at the New School for Social Research inNew York City . News of the position and a visa to theUSA reached the camp where Grelling had been joined by his wife Greta, who had refused to divorce him for safety reasons. But immigration officials were perplexed by Grelling's alleged propensity towards Communism, so there was a delay that was fatal to Grelling. He and his wife are supposed to have been shipped toAuschwitz , arriving there on September 18th, 1942 and perishing in thegas chamber s that day or soon thereafter, although it has been also reported that Grelling was killed in 1941 at the border between France andSpain .Selected publications
"Gibt es eine Gödelsche Antinomie?". In: Theoria, 3, 1936.
References
*C. G. Hempel, "Autobiografia intellettuale" in "Oltre il positivismo logico". Armando: Rome, 1988. (Text of an interview Hempel gave to Richard Noland in 1982, published for the first time in Italian translation in 1988).
External links
* [http://enabling.org/ia/gestalt/kgbio.html Kurt Grelling: Steadfast scholar in a time of madness]
* [http://www.emis.de/cgi-bin/jfmen/MATH/JFM/quick.html Query at the Electronic Research Archive for Mathematics]
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.