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Empiricism and the Norms of Scientific Knowledge: Some Reflections on Otto Neurath and Pierre Bourdieu

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Norms, Values, and Society

Part of the book series: Vienna Circle Institute Yearbook ((VCIY,volume 2))

Abstract

In this paper I would like to discuss some normative aspects of Otto Neurath’s concept of scientific knowledge. I will take some reflections of Pierre Bourdieu, a sociologist known for his harsh criticism of “philosophers” as a point of reference. I have decided to employ his “non-philosophical” perspective because of its convergence with the very tradition to which the Institute Vienna Circle has aligned itself. That tradition derived the form and power of its beginnings from the unbiased attitude, the impartiality of its intellectual and scientific standpoint. This impartial attitude was all but naive I wish to claim; it was the result of a conscious effort to liberate the philosophical vision from the sediments of a history of perception and thought that had reached its end in the 19th century.1 Of course, that that history had come to its end was felt by many scientists, philosophers and artists at the beginning of this century. What distinguished the Vienna Circle was that its members reacted with new insights into the nature of knowledge, indeed with the attempt to develop the impartiality of the scientific point of view. What had been in the foreground up to that time receded into the background for those versed in modern formal logic and empirical science. The disciplinary boundaries, most notably those between the natural sciences and the humanities (Natur- und Geisteswissenschaften) became blurred. What we know became so complex and rich that traditional forms of classification were revealed as inadequate. For Neurath “Unified Science” was the name for future forms of classification and “encyclopedia” the name for the “orchestration” of the individual sciences. What remained of “philosophy” focussed on the logical analysis of language and — long neglected — the historical and practical aspects of science. Taking these general developments as my background here I want to defend the thesis that working on the “impartiality” of the scientist’s point of view can be seen as a contribution to and work on the normative dimensions of knowledge. In the case of the Vienna Circle and Otto Neurath such a contribution has nothing to do with developing a scientific conception of ethics or rationality.2 Rather it represents an attempt to analyze the scientific approach to reality and to reinforce the social effects of this approach by making it more precise. Viewed in this context Neurath’s project of a “scientific world conception” coincides with some perspectives whose topicality cannot be overestimated, Pierre Bourdieu’s epistemological reflections on sociology among them.

For some very helpful comments and help with the translation of the German version of this paper I would like to thank Thomas E. Uebel and Camilla R. Nielsen.

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Notes

  1. The decline of the “mechanical world-view” and the emergence of conventionalism played a key-role in the “First Vienna Circle”, see: Philipp Frank: Modern Science and its Philosophy. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press 1949; and Rudolf Haller: “Der erste Wiener Kreis”, in: Erkenntnis 22, 1986, pp.341–358, transl. by Thomas E. Uebel “The First Vienna Circle”, in: Thomas E. Uebel (ed.): Rediscovering the Forgotten Vienna Circle. Austrian Studies on Otto Neurath and the Vienna Circle , Dordrecht: Kluwer 1991 (Boston Studies in the Philosophy of Science). For the later Vienna Circle see Thomas E. Uebel: Overcoming Logical Positivism from within. The Emergence of Neurath’s Naturalism in the Vienna Circle’s Protocol Sentence Debate, Amsterdam-Atlanta, GA: Rodopi 1992: “According to much academic philosophy, the knowledge claim of natural science was itself in jeopardy. A new specifically anti-scientific scepticism had arisen: the inability of scientific philosophy to account in particular for the ‘new physics’ of relativity theory was widely taken to challenge the scientific rationality itself. Science itself, so it turned out, rested on the employment of concepts and principles which were not univocally supported by empirical evidence.”(p.11) “To account for the objectivity of scientific knowledge in the face of the failure of traditional empiricism and of Kant, was the central problem to which their considerable efforts were addressed.” (p.17)

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  2. For sure, some members of the Circle intended to found ethics scientifically, especially Schlick, Kraft, Feigl and Menger. And Rainer Hegselmann’s interpretation of Neurath’s work as “program of rationality” follows the same tendency: Rainer Hegselmann: “Otto Neurath - Empiristischer Aufklärer and Sozialreformer”, in: Rainer Hegselmann (ed.): Otto Neurath, Wissenschaftliche Weltauffassung, Sozialismus and Logischer Empirismus, Frankfurt: Suhrkamp 1979. - I want to focus on the social effects of scientific knowledge from a different point of view.

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  3. Thomas E. Uebel: Overcoming Logical Positivism from Within, op. cit.

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  4. Otto Neurath: “Nationalökonomieund Wertlehre, eine systematische Untersuchung”, in: Zeitschrift fúr Volkswirtschaft, Sozialpolitik and Verwaltung 20, 1911, pp.52–114. (All citations trans. by E.N.)

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  5. bid., p.53.

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  6. For Neurath’s “relational physicalism” see: Thomas E. Uebel: Overcoming Logical Positivism from Within, op.cit., especially chapter 6 and 7. EMPIRICISM AND THE NORMS OF SCIENTIFIC KNOWLEDGE 31

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  7. The fact, that Bourdieu refers to Cassirer is no longer a reason to exclude his epistemological concept of “relation” from a discussion of the Vienna Circle’s theory. Michael Friedman: “Epistemology in the Aufbau”, Synthese 93, 1, 1992, demonstrated very strongly Neo-Kantian features in Carnap’s “Aufbau”. Even if Neurath would oppose the search for Neo-Kantian “relatives” of his own, this search - at least for the young Neurath - could be fruitful. We know that sometimes we cannot avoid being resentful - even and especially towards “relatives”.

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  8. Pierre Bourdieu: “La pratique de l’anthropologie réflexive”, in: Pierre Bourdieu/Loic J.D. Wacquant (eds.): Réponses. Pour une anthropologie réflexive, Paris: Éditions du Seuil 1992, p.200.

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  9. bid.

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  10. Otto Neurath: “Nationalökonomie und Wertlehre, eine systematische Untersuchung”, op.cit., p.91.

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  11. The struggle for and against the “relative autonomy of science” is demonstrated in Bourdieu’s studies on the French academic institutions: Pierre Bourdieu: Homo academicus, Paris: Les éditions de Minuit 1984.

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  12. Otto Neurath: “Nationalökonomie und Wertlehre, eine systematische Untersuchung”, op.cit., p.82.

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  13. Otto Neurath et al.: Wissenschaftliche Weltauffassung. Der Wiener Kreis. Veröffentlichungen des Vereines Ernst Mach, ed. by Verein Ernst Mach, Wien: Artur Wolf Verlag 1929. Published in: Rudolf Haller/Heiner Rutte (eds.): Otto Neurath. Gesammelte philosophische und methodologische Schriften, Wien: Hölder-Pichler-Tempsky 1981, p.315.

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  14. Otto Neurath: Die Wirtschaftsordnung der Zukunft und die Wirtschaftswissenschaften, Berlin-Wien: Verlag für Fachliteratur 1917, p.19.

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  15. Otto Neurath: “Nationalökonomie und Wertlehre, eine systematische Untersuchung”, op.cit., p.95.

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  16. Ibid.

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  17. Ibid., p.92.

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  18. Ibid., p.94.

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  19. Ibid., pp.94f.

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  20. Ibid., p.58.

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  21. Ibid., p.94.

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  22. Ibid., p.82.

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  23. Otto Neurath: “Universal Jargon and Terminology”, in: Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society, New Series, 41, 1941; the citation follows the German translation in: Otto Neurath: Gesammelte philosophische und methodologische Schriften, op.cit., p.904.

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  24. Otto Neurath: “Nationalökonomie und Wertlehre, eine systematische Untersuchung”, op.cit., p.67.

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  25. Otto Neurath: “Einheit der Wissenschaft als Aufgabe”, in: Erkenntnis 5, 1935; the citation follows: Otto Neurath: Gesammelte philosophische und methodologische Schriften, op.cit., p.629.

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  26. Neurath’s controversy with Schlick touched this point. See: Moritz Schlick: “Über das Fundament der Erkenntnis”, in: Erkenntnis 4, 1934, pp.79–99, and Otto Neurath’s answer: “Radikaler Physikalismus und `Wirkliche Welt’”, in: Erkenntnis 4, 1934, pp.346–362, repr. in: Otto Neurath: Gesammelte philosophische und methodologische Schriften, op.cit., pp.611624. Also other members of the Vienna Circle did not agree with Neurath, for instance Edgar Zilsel, whose political convictions were close to those of Neurath’s, but whose philosophical conceptions were much more Kantian. See: Edgar Zilsel: “Bemerkungen zur Wissenschaftslogik”, in: Erkenntnis 3, 1932, pp.143–161.

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  27. In these methodological reflections we can find another parallelism between Neurath and Bourdieu: the tabular form of representing data plays a crucial role in empirical research, because it makes possible to represent discontinuities, breaks, “holes” within the construction and so helps to avoid wrong continuities. See: Otto Neurath: “Nationalökonomie und Wert lehre, eine systematische Untersuchung”, op.cit., pp.77–79 and Pierre Bourdieu: “La pratique de l’anthropologie réfexive”, op.cit., pp.201f.

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  28. In the protocol sentence debate not only Neurath, but also Hans Hahn, another member of the so-called “left wing” of the Vienna Circle, focussed on these “constructiviste aspects: ”Hahn stated […] that every statement of everyday language was theory-laden and that the isolation of atomic elements was conventional.“ Thomas E. Uebel: Overcoming Logical Positivism from Within,op.cit., p.123.

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  29. Since the disillusion about the omnipotence of the free market system is growing, Neurath’s ideas on economics could fmd more interest in the future than in the past. Michel Rosier just published a very interesting contribution to such a discussion in which Otto Neurath plays a crucial role: L’Etat Expérimenteur, Paris: Presses Universitaires de France 1993. On Neurath’s concept of “utopia” see also: Antonia Soulez: “La construction des utopies comme tache de l’ingénieur social, selon O. Neurath, en 1919” in: Philippe Soulez (ed.): Les Philosophes et la Guerre de 14, Paris: Presses Universitaires de Vincennes 1988, pp.237–250, and Elisabeth Nemeth: “Otto Neuraths Utopien - der Wille zur Hoffnung”, in: Friedrich Stadler (ed.): Arbeiterbildung in der Zwischenkriegszeit. Otto Neurath - Gerd Arntz. Vienna/Munich: Löcker 1982, translated in: Thomas E. Uebel (ed.): Rediscovering the Forgotten Vienna Circle, op.cit., pp.285–294.

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Nemeth, E. (1994). Empiricism and the Norms of Scientific Knowledge: Some Reflections on Otto Neurath and Pierre Bourdieu. In: Pauer-Studer, H. (eds) Norms, Values, and Society. Vienna Circle Institute Yearbook, vol 2. Springer, Dordrecht. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-94-017-2454-8_3

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