Karl Popper

Sir
Karl Popper
Popper in the 1980s
Born
Karl Raimund Popper

(1902-07-28)28 July 1902
Died17 September 1994(1994-09-17) (aged 92)
London, England
Resting placeLainzer Friedhof, Vienna, Republic of Austria
Citizenship
  • Austria
  • United Kingdom (from 1945)
RelativesJosef Popper-Lynkeus (uncle)
AwardsKnight Bachelor (1965)
Education
Alma materUniversity of Vienna (PhD, 1928)
ThesisZur Methodenfrage der Denkpsychologie (On Questions of Method in the Psychology of Thinking) (1928)
Doctoral advisor
Philosophical work
Era20th-century philosophy
RegionWestern philosophy
School
Institutions
Doctoral students
Notable students
Main interests
Notable ideas
Signature

Sir Karl Raimund Popper CH FRS FBA (28 July 1902 – 17 September 1994) was an Austrian–British philosopher, academic and social commentator. One of the 20th century's most influential philosophers of science, Popper is known for his rejection of the classical inductivist views on the scientific method in favour of empirical falsification, and for founding the Department of Philosophy at the London School of Economics. According to Popper, a theory in the empirical sciences can never be proven, but it can be falsified, meaning that it can (and should) be scrutinised with decisive experiments. Popper was opposed to the classical justificationist account of knowledge, which he replaced with "the first non-justificational philosophy of criticism in the history of philosophy", namely critical rationalism.

In political discourse, he is known for his vigorous defence of liberal democracy and the principles of social criticism that he believed made a flourishing open society possible. His political thought resides within the camp of Enlightenment rationalism and humanism. He was a dogged opponent of totalitarianism, nationalism, fascism, romanticism, collectivism, and other kinds of (in Popper's view) reactionary and irrational ideas, and identified modern liberal democracies as the best-to-date embodiment of an open society.