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  1. A.J. Ayer made his name as a philosopher with the publication of Language, Truth and Logic in 1936, a book which established him as the leading English representative of logical positivism, a doctrine put forward by a group of philosophers known as members of the Vienna Circle.

  2. AYER ALFRED JULES (1910-1989) • PHILOSOPHIE ANALYTIQUE. Né en 1910, professeur de logique à Oxford, A. J. Ayer fut tout d'abord, dans les pays anglo-saxons, le meilleur artisan de cette forme extrême d' empirisme qu'est le positivisme logique.

  3. 11 mai 2018 · Alfred Jules Ayer. Alfred Jules Ayer (1910-1989) was a leading philosopher of the 20th century who rigorously attacked metaphysics. His major work was Language, Truth and Logic. Alfred Jules Ayer was born in 1910. He was educated at Eton and Oxford University. After his graduation from Oxford, he studied at the University of Vienna ...

  4. Accueil >Encyclopédie [personnage] > sir Alfred Jules Ayer. sir Alfred Jules Ayer. Philosophe britannique (Londres 1910-Londres 1989). Il est l'un des fondateurs du positivisme logique (Language, Truth and Logic, 1936). Applications mobiles ...

  5. 31 janv. 2022 · Sir A.J. Ayer, in full Sir Alfred Jules Ayer, (born October 29, 1910, London, England—died June 27, 1989, London), British philosopher and educator and a leading representative of logical positivism through his widely read work Language, Truth, and Logic (1936). Although Ayer’s views changed considerably after the 1930s, becoming more moderate and increasingly subtle, he remained loyal to ...

  6. Sir Alfred Jules Ayer (29. října 1910, Londýn, Anglie, Velká Británie – 27. června 1989, Londýn) byl anglický analytick ý filozof, známý především jako propagátor myšlenek logického pozitivismu v anglicky mluvících zemích. Byl dlouho ...

  7. Sir Alfred Jules Ayer (October 29, 1910 – June 27, 1989), better known as A. J. Ayer (or "Freddie" by his friends), was a British philosopher known for his promotion of logical positivism, particularly in his books Language, Truth and Logic (1936) and The Problem of Knowledge (1956).