Moritz Schlick

born April 14, 1882, Berlin
died June 22, 1936, Vienna
German logical empiricist philosopher and a leader of the
European school of positivist philosophers known as the
Vienna Circle.
After studies in physics at Heidelberg, Lausanne, Switz.,
and Berlin, where he studied with the German physicist Max
Planck, Schlick earned his Ph.D. with a thesis on physics.
His treatise, “Das Wesen der Wahrheit nach der modernen
Logik” (1910; “The Nature of Truth According to Modern
Logic”), reflected his scientific training and helped him
obtain a teaching post at the University of Rostock in 1911.
In 1922, after a year of teaching at Kiel, he became
professor of the philosophy of inductive sciences at Vienna.
There his disenchantment with earlier philosophies of
knowledge crystallized, and he sought to establish new ways
of ascertaining the nature of “how men know what they know,”
by referring to the methods of the sciences.
The group of philosophers that gathered around Schlick at
Vienna included Rudolf Carnap and Otto Neurath and the
mathematicians and scientists Kurt Gödel, Philipp Frank, and
Hans Hahn. Influenced by Schlick’s predecessors in the chair
of philosophy in Vienna, Ernst Mach and Ludwig Boltzmann,
the Circle also drew on the work of philosophers Bertrand
Russell and Ludwig Wittgenstein. The members of the Circle
were united by their hostility to the abstractions of
metaphysics, by the grounding of philosophical statements on
empirical evidence, by faith in the techniques of modern
symbolic logic, and by belief that the future of philosophy
lay in its becoming the handmaiden of science.
As the reputation of the Circle grew through its books,
journals, and manifestos, philosophers in other countries
who were similarly inclined became familiar with one
another’s work. In 1929, as the movement for Logical
Positivism began to expand, Schlick went to California
briefly as a visiting professor at Stanford University. He
continued to direct the Circle’s activities and to write for
its new review, Erkenntnis (Knowledge), from the time of his
return to Europe until his death, which resulted from
gunshot wounds inflicted by a deranged student.
Schlick was a prolific essayist and was the author of
such books as Raum und Zeit in der gegenwärtigen Physik (2nd
ed. 1919; Space and Time in Contemporary Physics, 1920);
Allgemeine Erkenntnislehre (1918; “General Theory of
Knowledge”); Fragen der Ethik (1930; Problems of Ethics,
1939); and the posthumous Grundzüge der Naturphilosophie
(1948; Philosophy of Nature, 1949) and Natur und Kultur
(1952).