Language, Truth, and Logic, work by the British philosopher A.J. Ayer, published in 1936, that became a popular manifesto of logical positivism, a philosophical movement that originated in the 1920s in discussions among members of the Vienna Circle, a group of philosophers, scientists, and mathematicians that met regularly in Vienna to investigate scientific language and scientific methodology. Ayer’s remarkably clearheaded and rigorous presentation of the main tenets of logical positivism established him as the movement’s leading representative in the English-speaking world.
After graduating from the University of Oxford (1932) and securing a fellowship at Oxford’s college of Christ Church, Ayer traveled to Vienna, where he studied under Moritz Schlick, the founder and leader of the Vienna Circle, and attended meetings of the group. Although Ayer’s knowledge of German was limited, he understood enough of it to grasp the doctrine that the group was developing. He became convinced that logical positivism marked an important advance in the tradition of empiricism, and he returned home an ardent convert. Within two and a half years he had completed Language, Truth, and Logic, an excellent summary and defense of logical positivism. In his book Ayer argued for the logical-positivist thesis of verificationism (also called the verifiability principle), according to which an utterance is meaningful only if it expresses a proposition the truth or falsehood of which can be verified (at least in principle) through experience. He used this theory to argue that metaphysical talk about God, the cosmos, or a “transcendent reality” was not merely, as earlier empiricists had maintained, excessively conjectural but literally meaningless. Ayer further developed the verificationist position by showing how statements about the external world, other minds, and the past could be accorded sense through an analysis in verificationist terms. Ayer also devoted a chapter of his work to his own theory of emotivism, according to which statements of moral evaluation, because they are unverifiable, are not descriptions of fact but merely “emotive” expressions of positive or negative feelings. Ayer’s emotivism aroused particular controversy but contributed to the popularity of Language, Truth, and Logic, which eventually became one of the best-selling works of serious 20th-century philosophy.