Two articles by Lewis Feuer caught my attention in the '40s when 1 was
wondering, asa student physicist, about the relations of physics to
philosophy and to the world in turmoil. One was his essay on 'The
Development of Logical Empiricism' (1941), and the other his critical
review of Philipp Frank's biography of Einstein, 'Philosophy and the
Theory of Relativity' (1947). How extraordinary it was to find so
intelligent, independent, critical, and humane a mind; and furthermore
he went further, as I soon realized when I looked for his name on other
publications. I recall arguing with myself over his exploration of
'Indeterminacy and Economic Development' (1948), and even more when I
read his 'Dialectical Materialism and Soviet Science' (1949). More
papers, and then the fascinating, sometimes irritating, always
insightful, books. His monograph on Psychoanalysis and Ethics 1955, the
beautiful sociological and humanist study of Spinoza and the Rise of
Liberalism (1958), his essays on 'The Social Roots of Einstein's Theory
of Relativity' (1971) together with the book on Einstein and the Genera-
tions of Science (1974), the splendid reader from the works of Marx and
Engels, Basic Writings on Politics and Philosophy (1959) which was a
major text of the '60s, the stimulating essays on the social formation
which seems to have been required for a modern scientific movement to
develop, set forth most convincingly in The Scientific Intellectual
(1963).