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  1. Rudolf Carnap (/ ˈkɑːrnæp /; [20] German: [ˈkaʁnaːp]; 18 May 1891 – 14 September 1970) was a German-language 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. Biography. Carnap's birthplace in Wuppertal.

  2. Feb 24, 2020 · Notorious as one of the founders, and perhaps the leading philosophical representative, of the movement known as logical positivism or logical empiricism, he was one of the originators of the new field of philosophy of science and later a leading contributor to semantics and inductive logic.

  3. Sep 10, 2024 · Rudolf Carnap (born May 18, 1891, Ronsdorf, Germany—died September 14, 1970, Santa Monica, California, U.S.) was a German-born American philosopher of logical positivism. He made important contributions to logic, the analysis of language, the theory of probability, and the philosophy of science.

  4. Rudolf Carnap, a German-born philosopher and naturalized U.S. citizen, was a leading exponent of logical positivism and was one of the major philosophers of the twentieth century. He made significant contributions to philosophy of science, philosophy of language, the theory of probability, inductive logic and modal logic.

  5. The Reconstruction of Scientific Theories. Throughout his career, the rational reconstruction of scientific theories constituted one of the cornerstones of Carnap’s work (see, e.g., Demopoulos 2007, Andreas 2007, Lutz 2012a,b for surveys). For Carnap, this involved the reconstruction of the syntax and (later) semantics of a scientific ...

  6. Rudolf Carnap (1891-1970) was one of the leading philosophers of the twentieth century. After studying physics and philosophy in Germany, Carnap taught philosophy in Vienna, Prague, and — after emigrating to the United States in 1935 — at the University of Chicago and UCLA.

  7. Tolerance was introduced explicitly in 1932, first in a paper replying to Neurath (Carnap 1932e) on the question of the appropriate form of “protocol sentences” (sentences in which empirical observations are recorded), and then most famously in §17 of the Logical Syntax, which we will discuss below.

  8. Rudolf Carnap has a major place in the history of analytic philosophy. He was entranced by the promise that Bertrand Russell’s and A.N. Whitehead’s Principia Mathematica (1912) seemed to hold out for creating a logical foundation for mathematics, and by extension, philosophy.

  9. Apr 28, 2008 · Rudolf Carnap (1891-1970) was a giant of twentieth-century philosophy. He was one of the leading figures of the logical empiricist movement associated with the Vienna Circle and one of the leaders of the analytic tradition more generally.

  10. www.encyclopedia.com › philosophy-biographies › rudolf-carnapRudolf Carnap - Encyclopedia.com

    May 18, 2018 · The German-American philosopher Rudolf Carnap (1891-1970) was the most prominent representative of the school of logical positivism, sometimes called logical empiricism. Rudolf Carnap was born on May 18, 1891, in Ronsdorf, Germany.