Livre | Chapitre
Dilthey and Carnap
the feeling of life, the scientific worldview, and the elimination of metaphysics
pp. 321-346
Résumé
In this chapter the author examines how Dilthey's philosophy formed part of the background of the Vienna Circle's project of eliminating metaphysics and justifying a scientific life-stance (Lebenshaltung). Dilthey had promoted empirical scientific inquiry and critiqued metaphysics as an indemonstrable attitude rooted in a "feeling of life" (Lebensgefühl) and articulated as a "worldview." Concepts of the feeling of life, worldview, and life-stance were mobilized to confront traditional authority while emphasizing the priority of experience and a more critical and experimental scientific and artistic spirit. Carnap adopted elements from Dilthey's critique and sensitivity to the possibility of a logic of the singular and the historical. Carnap's early project can be interpreted as a logical empiricist hermeneutics promoting the task of pragmatic formation, cultivation, and education (Bildung) that furthers life by elucidating it.
Détails de la publication
Publié dans:
Feichtinger Johannes, Fillafer Franz L. , Surman Jan (2018) The worlds of positivism: a global intellectual history, 1770–1930. Dordrecht, Springer.
Pages: 321-346
DOI: 10.1007/978-3-319-65762-2_12
Citation complète:
Nelson Eric Sean, 2018, Dilthey and Carnap: the feeling of life, the scientific worldview, and the elimination of metaphysics. In J. Feichtinger, F. Fillafer & J. Surman (eds.) The worlds of positivism (321-346). Dordrecht, Springer.