Librería: Book House in Dinkytown, IOBA, Minneapolis, MN, Estados Unidos de America
Miembro de asociación: IOBA
EUR 27,13
Cantidad disponible: 1 disponibles
Añadir al carritoPaperback. Condición: Very Good. Binding tight, sturdy, and square; text very good+. Shallow crease to wraps at rear. NOT ex-lib. Ships from Dinkytown in Minneapolis, Minnesota.
Idioma: Inglés
Publicado por Oxford University Press, New York, 1920
Librería: Arroyo Seco Books, Pasadena, Member IOBA, Pasadena, CA, Estados Unidos de America
Miembro de asociación: IOBA
Original o primera edición
EUR 93,11
Cantidad disponible: 1 disponibles
Añadir al carritoHardcover. Condición: Near Fine. No Jacket. First American Edition. Xi, 89 Pp. A Philosophical Rather Than Mathematical Introduction, Prepared With Some Specific Advice From Einstein.Exceptionally Well Preserved, No Fading Or Marks, No Wear But Traces Of Rubbing At Corners, Gilt Still Brilliant. This Example With The Original Purchase Receipt For This Book From The Oxford University Press, Dated June 22, 1920.
Año de publicación: 1935
Librería: Maggs Bros. Ltd ABA, ILAB, PBFA, London, Reino Unido
Original o primera edición
EUR 354,47
Cantidad disponible: 1 disponibles
Añadir al carritoFirst edition. 8vo. viii, 193, [1], [2, publisher?s advertisements] pp. Original printed wrappers, edges untrimmed (some occasional pencilled marginal annotations, extremities very lightly rubbed and creased, faint spotting to edges, notwithstanding a very good copy overall). Wien, Julius Springer. 1935. An interesting peripheral figure of the Vienna Circle, Josef Schächter was ordained as a rabbi in 1926 and taught Talmud at the Hebräische Pädagogium in Vienna. He studied philosophy under Mortiz Schlick at the University of Vienna, completing a dissertation on Nicolai Hartmann's critical realist metaphysics under Schlick's supervision in 1931, and regularly participated in the Vienna Circle's weekly discussion meetings at the Institute of Mathematics on Boltzmanngasse 5. Schächter's main work, Prolegomena to a Critical Grammar was edited by Schlick, who also contributed a short introduction. It was published in Schriften zur wissenschaftlichen Weltauffassung, an important monograph series that included the first appearance Karl Popper's The Logic of Scientific Discovery (1934). The work 'stands in splendid isolation as the best specimen of the logical positivist analysis of natural language' (Paul Foulkes, Foreword to the English Edition, 1971). It's object is to develop a universal grammar and the prefatory remarks of both Schächter and Schlick acknowledge the influence of Wittgenstein, although the aim and approach differ from Wittgenstein?s Philosophische Grammatik. The Prolegomena not only explains the general, philosophical principles to be followed, but in the light of these proceeds to cover the entire range of conventional grammar. Schächter's involvement with the Vienna Circle began to wane after Schlick's murder by his former student Johann Nelböck in 1936. He emigrated to Mandate Palestine in 1938 and continued to write 'mainly in Hebrew about the connections between philosophy, religion, and world views, employing a logical analysis in the spirit of Schlick, Waismann, and Wittgenstein' (Stadler, The Vienna Circle, p. 484).