Overview
- Editors:
-
-
Maria Reichenbach
-
Robert S. Cohen
-
Boston University, Boston, USA
Access this book
Other ways to access
Table of contents (45 chapters)
-
Popular Scientific Articles
-
- Maria Reichenbach, Robert S. Cohen
Pages 219-225
-
- Maria Reichenbach, Robert S. Cohen
Pages 226-227
-
- Maria Reichenbach, Robert S. Cohen
Pages 228-231
-
- Maria Reichenbach, Robert S. Cohen
Pages 232-235
-
- Maria Reichenbach, Robert S. Cohen
Pages 236-240
-
- Maria Reichenbach, Robert S. Cohen
Pages 241-244
-
- Maria Reichenbach, Robert S. Cohen
Pages 245-248
-
- Maria Reichenbach, Robert S. Cohen
Pages 249-253
-
- Maria Reichenbach, Robert S. Cohen
Pages 254-257
-
- Maria Reichenbach, Robert S. Cohen
Pages 258-260
-
- Maria Reichenbach, Robert S. Cohen
Pages 261-262
-
- Maria Reichenbach, Robert S. Cohen
Pages 263-269
-
- Maria Reichenbach, Robert S. Cohen
Pages 270-272
-
- Maria Reichenbach, Robert S. Cohen
Pages 273-274
-
- Maria Reichenbach, Robert S. Cohen
Pages 275-279
-
General Scientific Articles
-
Front Matter
Pages 281-281
-
- Maria Reichenbach, Robert S. Cohen
Pages 283-297
-
- Maria Reichenbach, Robert S. Cohen
Pages 298-303
-
- Maria Reichenbach, Robert S. Cohen
Pages 304-323
-
- Maria Reichenbach, Robert S. Cohen
Pages 324-325
About this book
These two volumes form a full portrait of Hans Reichenbach, from the school boy and university student to the maturing and creative scholar, who was as well an immensely devoted teacher and a gifted popular writer and speaker on science and philosophy. We selected the articles for several reasons. Many of them have not pre viously been available in English; many are out of print, either in English or in German; some, especially the early ones, have been little known, and deal with subject-matters other than philosophy of science. The genesis and evolu tion of Reichenbach's ideas appeared to be of deep interest, and so we in cluded papers from four decades, despite occasional redundancy. We were, for example, pleased to include his extensive review article from the encyclo pedic Handbuch der Physik of 1929 on 'The Aims and Methods of Physical Knowledge', written at a time of creative collaboration between Reichenbach's Berlin group and the Vienna Circle of Schlick and Carnap. Reichenbach was a pioneer, opening new pathways to the solution of age-old problems in many fields: space, time, causality, induction and probability - philosophical analysis and interpretation of classical physics, relativity and quantum physics - logic, language, ethics, scientific explanation and methodology, critical appreciation and reconstruction of past metaphysical thinkers and scientists from Plato to Leibniz and Kant. Indeed, his own philosophical journey was initiated by his passage from Kant to anti-Kant.
Editors and Affiliations
-
Boston University, Boston, USA
Robert S. Cohen