Designation and Convention: A Chapter of Early Logical Empiricism

PSA Proceedings of the Biennial Meeting of the Philosophy of Science Association 1990 (2):149-157 (1990)
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Abstract

We have yet to fully understand the mariner or the measure to which logical empiricism emerged as a conventionalist response to both traditional Kantian and empiricist epistemology and to the apparent triumphs of “conventionalist stratagems” (in Popper’s aspersive locution) in the foundations of science. By “conventionalism”, however, is here understood a broader sense than customary, an extrapolation of views on the foundations of geometry and physics (associated in the first instance with Poincaré“) to an encompassing epistemological consideration of the development and validity of scientific concepts generally. In this new construal, the concepts of science are neither derivable from sense experience, nor are they transcendentally valid a priori conditions of its possibility. Rather they are “free creations of the human mind” whose provenance is “logically arbitrary”, as Poincare’ and (subsequently) Einstein put it.

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Thomas Ryckman
Stanford University

Citations of this work

Vienna circle.Thomas Uebel - 2008 - Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.

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References found in this work

Der logische Aufbau der Welt.Rudolf Carnap - 1928 - Annalen der Philosophie Und Philosophischen Kritik 8:106-107.
Allgemeine Erkenntnislehre.Moritz Schlick - 1925 - Annalen der Philosophie Und Philosophischen Kritik 5 (3):86-87.
Carnap's aufbau reconsidered.Michael Friedman - 1987 - Noûs 21 (4):521-545.

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