Richard Avenarius
Richard Ludwig Heinrich Avenarius was a French-born German-Swiss philosopher. He formulated the radical positivist doctrine of "empirical criticism" or empirio-criticism.
Life
Avenarius attended the Nicolaischule in Leipzig and studied at the University of Zurich, Berlin, and the University of Leipzig. At the University of Leipzig, he received the Doctor of Philosophy in 1868 with his thesis on Baruch Spinoza and his pantheism, obtained the habilitation in 1876, and taught there as Privatdozent. One year later, he became a professor at the University of Zurich. He died in Zurich in 1896.Work
Avenarius believed that scientific philosophy must be concerned with purely descriptive definitions of experience, which must be free of both metaphysics and materialism. His opposition to the materialist assertions of Carl Vogt resulted in an attack upon empirio-criticism by Vladimir Lenin in the latter's Materialism and Empirio-criticism.Avenarius' principal works are the famously difficult Kritik der reinen Erfahrung and Der menschliche Weltbegriff which influenced Ernst Mach, Ber Borochov and, to a lesser extent, William James.
He taught Anatoly Lunacharsky and was also influential on Alexander Bogdanov and Nikolai Valentinov.