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Work #1601 · Late

Knowledge and Error

Ernst Mach
1905 · German
Philosophy-of-science treatise · Empirio-criticism / philosophy of science / Vienna positivism (predecessor)

Mach's 1905 'Erkenntnis und Irrtum' — systematic empirio-critical philosophy of science

Attribute Fingerprint

Rows where works disagree are highlighted in gold. The full ontology grid is shown.

Attribute Knowledge and Error (Late)
Time · Extent Infinite
Time · Ontological Status Relational
Time · Grain Continuous
Time · Freedom Deterministic
Time · Traversability Linear
Time · Dimensionality One
Time · Direction Uni-directional
Space · Extent Infinite
Space · Ontological Status Relational
Space · Curvature Flat
Space · Dimensionality Three
Space · Locality Local
Matter · Extent Infinite
Matter · Ontological Status Emergent
Matter · Conservation Conserved
Matter · Dimensionality Three
Matter · Locality Local
Observer · Time Instance Single
Observer · Space Instance Single
Observer · Knowledge Extent Mediated
Observer · Knowledge Retainment Partial
Observer · Physicality Embodied
Observer · Agency Active
Observer · Number Plural
Observer · Metaphysical Agency Impersonal
Observer · Moral Authority Reason
Observer · Theological Method
Energy · Extent Infinite
Energy · Ontological Status Substantival
Energy · Conservation Conserved
Energy · Dispersibility Irreversible
Information · Ontological Status Substantival
Information · Cosmic Conservation Conserved
Information · Personal Conservation Non-conserved
Information · Granularity Continuous

Dimension-by-Dimension Evidence

What each work's passages reveal about its stance on each of the six dimensions.

Time

Knowledge and Error

1905.

Space

Knowledge and Error

Vienna.

Matter

Knowledge and Error

Single mature treatise.

Observer

Knowledge and Error

Late Mach.

Energy

Knowledge and Error

Late-systematic philosophy-of-science energies.

Information

Knowledge and Error

Single treatise.

Internal Tensions

Where each work's argument pulls against itself.

Knowledge and Error

Mach's most systematic philosophy-of-science work; major influence on Einstein and the Vienna Circle.