- Friedrich Waismann
Friedrich Waismann (
March 21 ,1896 -November 4 ,1959 ) was anAustria n mathematician, physicist, and philosopher. He is best known for being a member of theVienna Circle and one of the key theorists inlogical positivism .Life and work
Born in
Vienna , Waismann was educated in mathematics and physics at theUniversity of Vienna . In 1922, he began to study philosophy under the tutelage ofMoritz Schlick , the founder of the Vienna Circle. He emigrated to theUnited Kingdom in 1938. He was a reader inphilosophy of science at theUniversity of Cambridge from 1937 to 1939, and lecturer inphilosophy of mathematics at theUniversity of Oxford from 1939 until his death.Intermittently, from 1927 until 1936, Waismann had extensive conversations with
Ludwig Wittgenstein about topics in philosophy of mathematics andphilosophy of language . These conversations, recorded by Waismann, were published in "Ludwig Wittgenstein and the Vienna Circle" (1979, ed. B.F. McGuinness). Other members of the Circle (including Schlick,Rudolf Carnap , andHerbert Feigl ) also spoke with Wittgenstein, but not to Waismann's extent. At one point in 1934, Wittgenstein and Waismann considered collaborating on a book, but these plans fell through after their philosophical differences became apparent.Waismann later accused Wittgenstein ofobscurantism because of what he considered to be his betrayal of the project of logical positivism and empirically-based explanation [Shanker, S., & Shanker, V. A. (1986), "Ludwig Wittgenstein: critical assessments". London: Croom Helm,50-51.] . Ultimately the texts for the project, written or just transcribed by Waismann, have been published byGordon Baker in 2003. [ "The Voices of Wittgenstein, the Vienna Circle", by Ludwig Wittgenstein and Friedrich Waismann, Transcribed, edited and with an introduction by Gordon Baker, London:Routledge, 2003. On page xvii the editor asserts that "Like Ludwig Wittgenstein und der Wiener Kreis", this book is the publication of an important part of Waismann’s nachlass, and authorship is therefore appropriately ascribed to Waismann."]In "Introduction to Mathematical Thinking: The Formation of Concepts in Modern Mathematics" (1936), Waismann argued that mathematical truths are true by convention rather than being necessarily (or verifiably) true. His collected lectures, "The Principles of Linguistic Philosophy" (1965), and "How I See Philosophy" (1968, ed.
R. Harré ), a collection of papers, were published posthumously.References
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