William Kneale

http://dbpedia.org/resource/William_Kneale an entity of type: Thing

William Calvert Kneale (* 22. Juni 1906 in Liverpool; † 24. Juni 1990 in Grassington, Yorkshire, UK) war ein britischer Logiker, Logikhistoriker und Wissenschaftstheoretiker. Größere Bekanntheit erlangte er durch die gemeinsam mit seiner Frau Martha Kneale verfasste Geschichte der formalen Logik The Development of Logic (1962), die bis heute als Standardwerk auf diesem Gebiet gilt. rdf:langString
William Calvert Kneale (22 June 1906 – 24 June 1990) was an English logician best known for his 1962 book The Development of Logic, a history of logic from its beginnings in Ancient Greece written with his wife Martha. Kneale was also known as a philosopher of science and the author of a book on probability and induction. Educated at the Liverpool Institute High School for boys, he later became a fellow of Exeter College, Oxford, and in 1960 succeeded to the White's Professor of Moral Philosophy previously occupied by the linguistic philosopher J. L. Austin. He retired in 1966. rdf:langString
rdf:langString William Kneale
rdf:langString William Kneale
xsd:integer 18993000
xsd:integer 1093696735
rdf:langString William Calvert Kneale (* 22. Juni 1906 in Liverpool; † 24. Juni 1990 in Grassington, Yorkshire, UK) war ein britischer Logiker, Logikhistoriker und Wissenschaftstheoretiker. Größere Bekanntheit erlangte er durch die gemeinsam mit seiner Frau Martha Kneale verfasste Geschichte der formalen Logik The Development of Logic (1962), die bis heute als Standardwerk auf diesem Gebiet gilt.
rdf:langString William Calvert Kneale (22 June 1906 – 24 June 1990) was an English logician best known for his 1962 book The Development of Logic, a history of logic from its beginnings in Ancient Greece written with his wife Martha. Kneale was also known as a philosopher of science and the author of a book on probability and induction. Educated at the Liverpool Institute High School for boys, he later became a fellow of Exeter College, Oxford, and in 1960 succeeded to the White's Professor of Moral Philosophy previously occupied by the linguistic philosopher J. L. Austin. He retired in 1966.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 3239

data from the linked data cloud