Positive Economics: Difference between revisions
From Dickinson College Wiki
Jump to navigationJump to search
No edit summary |
No edit summary |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
<center>[[Group 3: Normative and Positive Traditions in Economics|Home]] | [[Introduction: What are Positive and Normative Economics?|Introduction]] | [[Normative Economics]] | [[Positive Economics]] | [[What the classicals said]] | [[Transition period, Seperation, and their labeling|Transition]] | [[Economics today (Positive) & its future]] | [[What we learn from this]] | [[Our Conclusions|Conclusion]] | [[Sources and Works Cited|Works Cited]]</center> | <center>[[Group 3: Normative and Positive Traditions in Economics|Home]] | [[Introduction: What are Positive and Normative Economics?|Introduction]] | [[Normative Economics]] | [[Positive Economics]] | [[What the classicals said]] | [[Transition period, Seperation, and their labeling|Transition]] | [[Economics today (Positive) & its future]] | [[What we learn from this]] | [[Our Conclusions|Conclusion]] | [[Sources and Works Cited|Works Cited]]</center> | ||
=Definition= | |||
=History= | =History= |
Revision as of 05:45, 1 May 2007
Definition
History
Vienna Circle
The Vienna Circle was a group of philosophical mathematicians and physicists who met to discuss the philosophy of science. Established in 1925, the group had a variety of members who formed the idea of logical positivism. They believed that their group had reached a "decisive turning point in philosophy"[4], but made sure to reference similarly-minded predecessors. Their influences basically consisted of all philosophers who disagreed with metaphysics or speculation, notably Ernst Mach, Bertrand Russell, and Ludwig Wittgenstein.