Feyerabend and Popper : correspondence and unpublished papers
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Bibliographic Information
Feyerabend and Popper : correspondence and unpublished papers
(Vienna Circle Institute library, v. 5 . Feyerabend's Formative years ; v. 1)
Springer, c2020
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Note
Includes bibliographical references and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
This book offers an inside look into the notoriously tumultuous, professional relationship of two great minds: Karl Popper and Paul Feyerabend. It collects their complete surviving correspondence (1948-1967) and contains previously unpublished papers by both. An introduction situates the correspondence in its historical context by recounting how they first came to meet and an extensive editorial apparatus provides a wealth of background information along with systematic mini-biographies of persons named.
Taken together, the collection presents Popper and Feyerabend's controversial ideas against the background of the postwar academic environment. It exposes key aspects of an evolving student-mentor relationship that eventually ended amidst increasing accusations of plagiarism. Throughout, readers will find in-depth discussions on a wide range of intriguing topics, including an ongoing debate over the foundations of quantum theory and Popper's repeated attempts to design an experiment that would test different interpretations of quantum mechanics. The captivating exchange between Feyerabend and Popper offers a valuable resource that will appeal to scientists, laymen, and a wide range of scholars: especially philosophers, historians of science and philosophy and, more generally, intellectual historians.
Table of Contents
Part I: Autobiographical Writings.- Chapter1. Autobiographical Remarks (1976).- Curricula Vitae (1951, 1965).- Part II: Correspondence.- Chapter 2. The Feyerabend-Popper Correspondence (1948-1967).- Part III: Unpublished Papers.- Chapter 3. Complementarity and the Two-Slit Experiment (1953).- Chapter 4. A Defence of Free Thinking in Quantum Theory (1953).- Chapter 5. Philosophy and the Physicists" or "The Conservatism of Modern Physics (1955).- Chapter 6. Observationally Complete Theories: Some observations on quantum theory (1958).
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