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The Murder of Professor Schlick: The Rise and Fall of the Vienna Circle Audiobook, by David Edmonds Play Audiobook Sample

The Murder of Professor Schlick: The Rise and Fall of the Vienna Circle Audiobook

The Murder of Professor Schlick: The Rise and Fall of the Vienna Circle Audiobook, by David Edmonds Play Audiobook Sample
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Read By: Rick Adamson Publisher: Tantor Audio Listen Time: at 1.0x Speed 8.00 hours at 1.5x Speed 6.00 hours at 2.0x Speed Release Date: November 2021 Format: Unabridged Audiobook ISBN: 9781666118261

Quick Stats About this Audiobook

Total Audiobook Chapters:

24

Longest Chapter Length:

57:21 minutes

Shortest Chapter Length:

07:01 minutes

Average Chapter Length:

30:10 minutes

Audiobooks by this Author:

3

Other Audiobooks Written by David Edmonds: > View All...

Publisher Description

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 twentieth 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.

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About David Edmonds

David Edmonds is an author and award-winning radio feature journalist at the BBC World Service. He studied at Oxford University, earned a PhD in philosophy from the Open University, and has held fellowships at the universities of Chicago and Michigan. He is the author of Caste Wars: A Philosophy of Discrimination and co-author with John Eidinow of Wittgenstein's Poker, Rousseau’s Dog, and Bobby Fischer Goes to War.