The Murder of Professor Schlick
The Rise and Fall of the Vienna Circle
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Narrated by:
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Rick Adamson
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By:
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David Edmonds
About this listen
On June 22, 1936, the philosopher Moritz Schlick was on his way to deliver a lecture at the University of Vienna when Johann Nelböck, a deranged former student of Schlick's, shot him dead on the university steps. Some Austrian newspapers defended the madman, while Nelböck himself argued in court that his onetime teacher had promoted a treacherous Jewish philosophy. David Edmonds traces the rise and fall of the Vienna Circle - an influential group of brilliant thinkers led by Schlick - and of a philosophical movement that sought to do away with metaphysics and pseudoscience in a city darkened by fascism, anti-Semitism, and unreason.
The Vienna Circle's members included Otto Neurath, Rudolf Carnap, and the eccentric logician Kurt Gödel. On its fringes were two other philosophical titans of the 20th century, Ludwig Wittgenstein and Karl Popper. The Circle championed the philosophy of logical empiricism, which held that only two types of propositions have cognitive meaning, those that can be verified through experience and those that are analytically true. For a time, it was the most fashionable movement in philosophy. Yet by the outbreak of World War II, Schlick's group had disbanded and almost all its members had fled. Edmonds reveals why the Austro-fascists and the Nazis saw their philosophy as such a threat.
©2020 Princeton University Press (P)2021 TantorWhat listeners say about The Murder of Professor Schlick
Average customer ratingsReviews - Please select the tabs below to change the source of reviews.
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Performance
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- Ofer Engel
- 08-07-22
Entertaining and informative, poor performance
A somewhat superficial but informative, outline of the Vienna Circle - the characters and the background for the rise and fall of logical empiricism. Edmonds weaves together a range of events, characters, anecdotes and ideas: an ambitious attempt that, for the most part, is successful. It does not, however, provide a very detailed introduction to the actual philosophical debates and what was at stake.
The performance, however, is poorly done - I was not always sure that the narrator was actually following the story himself. At times it appeared he was just reading words without quite understanding what was going on. The book is peppered with non-English words and phrases (mainly in German), but the narrator's attempt to pronounce them left much to be desired.
Hopefully someone with a better understanding of philosophy and history will make another attempt at performing this work.
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