Lenzen, Victor F. 1890-1975
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- OCLC database, Dec. 7, 2006
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Victor Fritz Lenzen (14 December 1890, in San Jose – 18 July 1975, in Oakland) was an American physicist most noted for his logical rigour and commitment to teaching. His father was a building contractor. He went to Lick-Wilmerding High School, San Francisco where he developed an early interests in marine engineering, studying the armaments and the outfittings of all the capital ships in the world. He liked to take long walks around the nearby Hunter's Point. Although he started studying engineering at the University of California in 1909, he developed an interest in physics, but decided to major in philosophy. After graduating at the head of his class in 1913, he received a scholarship to Harvard from the San Francisco Harvard Club. He gained his PhD in philosophy in 1916. Here he studied with Bertrand Russell and Josiah Royce, being influenced by their ideas on scientific methodology. He rejected Royce's idealism and developed his interest in physics, particularly with fundamental physical theory e.g. J.J. Thomson's Corpuscular Theory of Matter, and the philosophical approach found in Kant's Critique of Pure Reason.
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