ABSTRACT

Originally published in 2006. Sir Karl Popper (1902 1994) is one of the most controversial and widely read philosophers of the 20th century. His influence has been enormous in the fields of epistemology, logic, metaphysics, methodology of science, the philosophy of physics and biology, political philosophy, and the social sciences, and his intellectual achievement has stimulated many scholars in a wide range of disciplines. These three volumes of previously unpublished essays, based on lectures given at the congress KARL POPPER 2002 held in Vienna to mark the centenary of Popper's birth, provide an up-to-date examination of many aspects of Popper's life and thought. Volume II deals especially with Popper's metaphysics and epistemology, including his proposal (critical rationalism) that it is through sharp criticism rather than through the provision of justification that our knowledge progresses. Several papers tackle the problem of the empirical basis, and offer decidedly different answers to some unresolved questions. The volume contains also a number of papers evaluating Popper's celebrated, but much contested, solution to Hume's problem of induction.

part 1|119 pages

Popper’s Life and Times

chapter 1|20 pages

The Historical Roots of Popper’s Theory of the Searchlight

A Tribute to Otto Selz

chapter 4|16 pages

Karl Poppers erste Schritte in die Philosophie

Leonard Nelsons Paradoxien der Souveränität und Nelsons sowie Poppers Lösungsversuche

chapter 5|12 pages

The Young Popper Scholarly Field

A Comment on Dahms, Hansen, and ter Hark *

chapter 6|14 pages

Popper and Hayek

Who Influenced Whom? *

chapter 7|14 pages

A Tour of Popper’s Vienna *

chapter 8|8 pages

Sir Karl Popper School

More than just a Name?

chapter 9|8 pages

Popper in Iran

part 2|128 pages

Values in a World of Facts

chapter 10|20 pages

Popper and Nationalism

chapter 12|12 pages

Popper in the Poison Cupboards

The Resonance of his Political Works in the Former GDR

chapter 15|10 pages

Popper and Communitarianism

Ethical and Political Dimensions of Democracy

chapter 19|10 pages

Karl Popper’s ‘Third Way’

Public Policies for Europe and the West