Deliver to 
Free Shipping
  • Served Customers
  • Secure Payments
  • Served Customers
24/7 Live Chat
89542a3ca6233bb49e52ea3efb9b5221-g.jpg
89542a3ca6233bb49e52ea3efb9b5221-g.jpg

The Philosophy of Joseph Petzoldt: From Mach's Positivism to Einstein's Relativity

bystorebook
27 sales
NaN
$4.99 
(was $20.00)
 & Instant Download
You Save:$15.01
75% off
Payment Methods:
About this item

This volume is the first English resource to shed light on the philosophy of Joseph Petzoldt (1862-1929), the main pupil of Ernst Mach and founder of the Gesellschaft fur wissenschaftliche Philosophie, later the association of Berlin logical positivists. A central figure in the early debate on the theory of relativity, his work was praised by Einstein himself.
Tracing the development of Petzoldt’s ideas, starting from his early acceptance of materialism and Kantian agnosticism, Chiara Russo Krauss presents a comprehensive reconstruction of his philosophy in the context of the German milieu. She examines his attempt to develop a new philosophy following Gustav Fechner and the empiriocriticism of Richard Avenarius and Ernst Mach. In the final chapter, she sets out how Petzoldt proposed relativistic positivism as the official interpretation of Einstein’s relativity.
By illuminating key elements of Petzoldt’s work, this is a valuable case study for students and scholars of philosophy of science and late 19th-century and early 20th-century philosophy. It reveals the complex interplay of two different tendencies of the time: neo-Kantianism and its struggle to overcome the notion of thing-in-itself, as well as the need for an epistemological foundation for the new advances of science.

Questions 

Listed on 22 January, 2024