Published online by Cambridge University Press: 01 August 2009
Vienna's scientific culture has long attracted historians' attention. Impressive though the scientific accomplishments of Viennese scientists were, and recognized by numerous Nobel prizes, they alone do not account for the historians' interest. Rather, Vienna's culture of science was imbedded in broader humanistic visions and invested in political and educational projects of major historical significance. Viennese philosophy placed humanity's hopes in science and articulated its historical ramifications to the public, drawing out the political implications of competing scientific methodologies and tying them to dramatic historical events. This philosophy of science still reverberates nowadays in debates on liberty, markets, and government that quickly reveal their underpinning in the methodology of science. Vienna's scientific culture, it seems, has never ceased to capture the imagination, far beyond Austria.
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18 The episode is recounted in detail in Michael Stoeltzner, “Franz Serafin Exner's Indeterminist Theory of Culture”, Physics in Perspective 4 (2002), 267–319. Responding to German historical relativism and determinism, Exner sought to rescue a glimmer of hope for liberal culture.
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