Article ID: CBB004960700

Cassirer and Goldstein on Abstraction and the Autonomy of Biology (2020)

unapi

This article examines the mutual influence between Ernst Cassirer and his cousin, the neurologist Kurt Goldstein. For both Cassirer and Goldstein, views on the nature of human cognition were fundamental to their understanding of scientific knowledge, and these were informed by both philosophical theorizing and empirical research on pathologies of the nervous system. Following Cassirer, and in agreement with the physicalism of the Vienna Circle, Goldstein held that the physical sciences had progressed by arriving at abstract, mathematical representations to take the place of qualitative characterizations of observable reality. In tension with physicalism, Goldstein was not sanguine about the fruitfulness of the abstractive approach in biology. He proposed that biology must adhere to its own sui generis methods of observation and experimentation in order to obtain knowledge of the “natures” of living organisms. I argue that there is a parallel with Cassirer’s assertion of the differences between physical and cultural sciences, underwritten by the deployment of varying symbolic functions. I also propose that the neurological writings of Goldstein are an important backdrop to Cassirer’s positive evaluation of abstract thought, in contrast to the pessimism regarding a worldview dominated by scientific abstractions expressed by philosophers such as Bergson, Whitehead, and Husserl.

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Authors & Contributors
Opitz, Donald L.
Philippe Stamenkovic
Piqué, Pilar
Geroulanos, Stefanos
Steuding, Jörn J.
Rheinberger, Hans-Joerg
Journals
Science in Context
Revue d'Histoire des Sciences
HOPOS
History and Philosophy of the Life Sciences
Historical Studies in the Natural Sciences
Foundations of Science
Publishers
August Verlag
Springer-Verlag
Princeton University Press
Gallimard
Fink
Books on Demand
Concepts
Scientific families
Observation
Scientific communities; interprofessional relations
Experiments and experimentation
Science and gender
Philosophy of science
People
Cassirer, Ernst
Goldstein, Kurt
Dyson, Frank Watson
Anna Rachel Young Whiting
Whiting, Phineas Westcott
Hurwitz, Julius
Time Periods
20th century, early
19th century
Early modern
Modern
20th century, late
20th century
Places
Germany
Hanover (Germany)
England
United States
Sweden
Italy
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