Preface and Acknowledgments |
An Introduction to Logical Empiricism and the Unity of Science Movement in the Cold War / 1: |
Otto Neurath, Charles Morris, Rudolf Carnap, and Philipp Frank: Political Philosophers of Science / 2: |
Leftist Philosophy of Science in America and the Reception of Logical Empiricism in New York City / 3: |
"Doomed in Advance to Defeat"? John Dewey on Reductionism, Values, and the International Encyclopedia of Unified Science / 4: |
Red Philosophy of Science: Blumberg, Malisoff, Somerville, and Early Philosophy of Science / 5: |
The View from the Left: Logical Empiricism and Radical Philosophers / 6: |
The View from the Far Left: Logical Empiricism and Communist Philosophers / 7: |
Postwar Disillusionment, Anti-Intellectualism, and the Values Debate / 8: |
Horace Kallen's Attack on the Unity of Science / 9: |
Creeping Totalitarianism, Creeping Scholasticism: Neurath, Frank, and the Trouble with Semantics / 10: |
Frank's Neurathian Crusade: Science, Enlightenment, and Values / 11: |
"A Very Fertile Field for Investigation": Anticollectivism and Anticommunism in Popular and Academic Culture / 12: |
Anticommunist Investigations, Loyalty Oaths, and the Wrath of Sidney Hook / 13: |
Competing Programs for Postwar Philosophy of Science / 14: |
Freedom Celebrated: The Professional Decline of Philipp Frank and the Unity of Science Movement / 15: |
The Marginalization of Charles Morris / 16: |
Values, Axioms, and the Icy Slopes of Logic / 17: |
Professionalism, Power, and What Might Have Been / 18: |
References |
An introduction to logical empiricism and the Unity of Science Movement in the Cold War |
Otto Neurath, Rudolf Carnap, Charles Morris and Philipp Frank: political philosophers of science |
Leftist philosophy of science in America and the reception of logical empiricism in New York City |
'Doomed in advance to defeat'? John Dewey on reductionism, values and the International Encyclopedia of Unified Science |
Red philosophy of science: Blumberg, Malisoff, Somerville and early philosophy of science |
The view from the left: logical empiricism and radical philosophers |
The view from the far left: logical empiricism and communist philosophers |
Postwar disillusionment, anti-intellectualism, and the values debate |
Horace Kallen's attack on the unity of science |
Creeping totalitarianism, creeping scholasticism: Neurath, Frank, and the trouble with semantics |
Frank's neurathian crusade: science, enlightenment, and values |
'A very fertile field for investigation': anticollectivism and anticommunism in popular and academic culture |
Anticommunism investigations, loyalty oaths, and the wrath of Sidney Hook |
Competing programs for postwar philosophy of science |
Freedom celebrated: the professional decline of Philipp Frank and the Unity of Science Movement |
The marginalization of Charles Morris |
Values, axioms and the icy slopes of logic |
Professionalism, power and what might have been |
Preface and Acknowledgments |
An Introduction to Logical Empiricism and the Unity of Science Movement in the Cold War / 1: |
Otto Neurath, Charles Morris, Rudolf Carnap, and Philipp Frank: Political Philosophers of Science / 2: |