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  1. Hans Reichenbach was born in Hamburg on 26 September 1891. He studied engineering, mathematics, physics and philosophy under scientists such as May Planck, David Hilbert, Ernst Cassirer and Alois Riehl. In 1915, he received his doctorate from the philosophical faculty at the University of Erlangen and earned his habilitation (post-doctoral qualification) in Stuttgart in 1920. From 1920 to 1926 ...

  2. 24. Aug. 2008 · Hans Reichenbach. First published Sun Aug 24, 2008. Described as perhaps “the greatest empiricist of the 20th century” (Salmon, 1977a), the work of Hans Reichenbach (1891–1953) provides one of the main statements of empiricist philosophy in the 20th century. Provoked by the conflict between (neo-) Kantian a priorism and Einstein's ...

  3. Reichenbach, Hans Friedrich Herbert Günther. Philosoph und Wissenschaftstheoretiker, * 26.9.1891 Hamburg, † 9.4.1953 Los Angeles. (evangelisch)

  4. Hans Reichenbach (26. září 1891, Hamburk – 9. dubna 1953, Los Angeles) byl německo-americký filosof vědy a představitel logického pozitivismu. Jeho nejznámější dílo je The Rise of Scientific Philosophy ("Vznik vědecké filosofie", 1951).

  5. In this book, Reichenbach is concerned to show how the direction of time can be derived from physics and he derives it in 4 different ways, from thermodynamics, statistical mechanics, quantum mechanics, and the observation (in the macro-world) of marks, or history. He shows how each of these derivations is consistent with all the others.

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  6. Reichenbach's (1947) theory of tense. Hans Reichenbach is one of the first and also most influential contributors to the semantic analysis of tense. In Reichenbach (1947), he distinguishes three points in time and two ordering relations. The points in time are: ‘E‘ (the event), ‘R’ (a point of reference) and ‘S’ (point of speech).

  7. 12. Apr. 2022 · Der hier in einem Auszug edierte Text von Hans Reichenbach hat schon vor über vier Jahrzehnten einige Aufmerksamkeit erfahren, als er 1974 von Ulrich Linse ausführlich diskutiert Footnote 1 und vier Jahre später von Maria Reichenbach in Übersetzung in Reichenbachs Selected Writings 1909–1953 aufgenommen wurde.