Abstract
This chapter uses a comparison between Seebohm and the social scientist Felix Kaufmann as a way of introducing Kaufmann, a fascinating figure in his own right who was both of a member of the Vienna Circle and a phenomenologist to a wider philosophical audience, and to locate Seebohm’s positions within the broader framework of discussions in the philosophy of the sciences that were so central to both the analytical tradition and—at least in its inception—the phenomenological tradition as well.
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