Vienna Circle was developing in the 1920s, Einstein was going in the opposite
direction. The fact is Einstein’s special relativity was taken as support by all the
major philosophical positions alike: Neo-Kantian, positivist, realist, pragmatist,
and even religious Idealist.
- We have seen this in the endless critiques by ancient Greek Academics pointing out
 contradictions in the doctrines of Stoics, and in the imperviousness of Epicureans
 to attack. In ancient India the Ajivikas were ridiculed for their inconsistency
 between believing in all-encompassing Fate and their personal striving for libera-
 tion. In medieval India the Nyaya-Vaisheshika school responded to acute Buddhist
 and Advaita attacks on paradoxes in their position not by backing away from their
 realism but by extending it. These schools lasted many generations without chang-
 ing their positions.
- Popper states in his autobiography that he had had the basic idea already in 1919,
 as the result of disgust with Marxist politics and the enthusiastic claims of the
 Freudian and Adlerian psychoanalytic factions. This was at about the same time
 Schlick was invoking falsification against the Neo-Kantians; but neither Schlick
 nor Popper made much further use of the idea in these years. Popper’s family and
 personal connections brought him in contact with a wide range of the avant-garde
 political, musical, and social science movements in Vienna during the 1920s; these
 connections also kept his career interests scattered until 1930, when he began to
 focus on developing the philosophical implications of a falsification criterion in
 terms of the debates that were now splitting the Vienna Circle. Although he
 retrospectively portrays himself as the destroyer of logical positivism, Popper
 became famous through his connection with the Vienna Circle (Popper, 1976:
 36–38, 78–90, 107).
- Kuhn’s originating network overlaps with that of Quine: both were members of
 the Harvard Society of Junior Fellows, and early in their careers both were
 personally connected to Conant, who built up the program in history of science
 at Harvard. Kuhn’s work is the best-known result of the confluence of two major
 organizational developments: the differentiation of the academic discipline of his-
 tory of science, together with the foundation-of-science issues generated by cross-
 disciplinary border flows of mathematics and physics into philosophy which con-
 stituted the Vienna Circle.
- Moore however remained oblivious to the revolt against the subject-predicate form
 being carried out by Frege and Russell; small wonder Wittgenstein despised the
 book.
- See the genealogical charts in Levy (1981: 22–25); Bell (1972: xviii–xix). There is
 nothing to match this elsewhere. In Germany, Brentano came from a family of
 famous writers, and Fichte’s son had some reputation among theological Idealists;
 but in general German linkages are purely academic ones. In America, James and
 Peirce were born into families of famous intellectuals, but overall the intellectual
 network has few kinship ties. Nor were British philosophers usually tied together
 by kinship, except in these few generations. Under previous conditions, most
 intellectuals were either celibate clerics or recipients of patronage in aristocratic
Notes to Pages 720–732^ •^1017