- published: 31 Jul 2014
- views: 1859
Rudolf Carnap (/ˈkɑːrnæp/;German: [ˈkaɐ̯naːp]; May 18, 1891 – September 14, 1970) was a German-born philosopher who was active in Europe before 1935 and in the United States thereafter. He was a major member of the Vienna Circle and an advocate of logical positivism. He is considered "one of the giants among twentieth-century philosophers."
Carnap's father had risen from the status of a poor ribbon-weaver to become the owner of a ribbon-making factory. His mother came from academic stock; her father was an educational reformer and her oldest brother was the archaeologist Wilhelm Dörpfeld. As a ten-year-old, Carnap accompanied his uncle on an expedition to Greece.
He began his formal education at the Barmen Gymnasium. From 1910 to 1914, he attended the University of Jena, intending to write a thesis in physics. But he also studied carefully Kant's Critique of Pure Reason during a course taught by Bruno Bauch, and was one of very few students to attend Gottlob Frege's courses in mathematical logic. While Carnap held moral and political opposition to World War I, he felt obligated to serve in the German army. After three years of service, he was given permission to study physics at the University of Berlin, 1917–18, where Albert Einstein was a newly appointed professor. Carnap then attended the University of Jena, where he wrote a thesis defining an axiomatic theory of space and time. The physics department said it was too philosophical, and Bruno Bauch of the philosophy department said it was pure physics. Carnap then wrote another thesis, with Bauch's supervision, on the theory of space in a more orthodox Kantian style, and published as Der Raum (Space) in a supplemental issue of Kant-Studien (1922). In it he makes the clear distinction between formal, physical and perceptual (e.g., visual) spaces.
I almost lost this priceless audio due to a failure on my hd, so I decided to publish it. Hope you enjoy it as much as I do. The transcript can be found on Rudolf Carnap Papers (Pittsburgh): http://digital.library.pitt.edu/u/ulsmanuscripts/pdf/31735061846840.pdf and here (with introductory remarks by Psillos): http://users.uoa.gr/~psillos/PapersI/86-Carnap(SHPS).pdf
discussion about the article and the place of it in the linguistic turn of philosophy and the trend of logical positivism.
Interview with Rudolf Carnap on German TV, 1964. I don't have copyrights to this video, just share with the hope that someone could translate it.
Interview with Rudolf Carnap on German TV, 1964. I don't have copyrights to this video, just share with the hope that someone could translate it. Captions: http://d.pr/f/VsvO
Interview with Rudolf Carnap on German TV, 1964. I don't have copyrights to this video, just share with the hope that someone could translate it.
Im Video erkläre ich die Grundzüge des logischen Empirismus nach Rudolf Carnap. Statt logischer Empirismus verwendet man auch den Begriff logischer Positivismus. Hier erkläre ich den Empirismus: https://youtu.be/WToGlp_x93o Hier erkläre ich den Positivismus: https://youtu.be/F_TN50oqIes In Zukunft nichts verpassen und am besten gleich meinen YouTube-Kanal abonnieren: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCF-fARvx7EsrUaiK3XEamCw Die Facebook-Seite zum Kanal: https://www.facebook.com/philosophievideos/
discussion about the 1950 article
http://phillipmcreynolds.com http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B6LJAllrDS4 Hilary Putnam talks about his teachers, Hans Reichenbach and Rudolf Carnap and the tendency in philosophy and other arts and humanities to simply discard old ideas. Reichenbach had an insight about preserving certain classes of observation statements that serve as a functional a priori, a Kantian notion, but was later persuaded by Carnap to discard the idea.