•  443
    The mind-body problem in the origin of logical empiricism: Herbert Feigl and psychophysical parallelism
    In Paolo Parrini, Wes Salmon & Merrilee Salmon (eds.), Cogprints, Pittsburgh University Pres. pp. 233--262. 2001.
    In the 19th century, "Psychophysical Parallelism" was the most popular solution of the mind-body problem among physiologists, psychologists and philosophers. (This is not to be mixed up with Leibnizian and other cases of "Cartesian" parallelism.) The fate of this non-Cartesian view, as founded by Gustav Theodor Fechner, is reviewed. It is shown that Feigl's "identity theory" eventually goes back to Alois Riehl who promoted a hybrid version of psychophysical parallelism and Kantian mind-body theo…Read more
  •  139
    Origins of the logical theory of probability: Von Kries, Wittgenstein, Waismann
    International Studies in the Philosophy of Science 15 (2). 2001.
    The physiologist and neo-Kantian philosopher Johannes von Kries (1853-1928) wrote one of the most philosophically important works on the foundation of probability after P.S. Laplace and before the First World War, his Principien der Wohrscheinlich-keitsrechnung (1886, repr. 1927). In this book, von Kries developed a highly original interpretation of probability, which maintains it to be both logical and objectively physical. After presenting his approach I shall pursue the influence it had on Lu…Read more