Book | Chapter
The Viennese background
pp. 17-26
Abstract
Ernst Mach was born in Chirlitz, Moravia, in 1838 into a cultured, freethinking family. Practically for all of the scientist's long life, Austria-Hungary was ruled by Emperor Franz-Joseph, who reigned from 1848 to 1916. Mach's father, Johann, was an eccentric who had studied science and philosophy in Prague and who was, for a time, a private tutor to the sons of the Baron Brethon in Vienna. He preferred farming and his own schemes, including the surprisingly half-successful idea to raise silkworms in Austria.1 Mach owed his first education in science to his father's garden-physics demonstrations.
Publication details
Published in:
Banks Erik C. (2003) Ernst Mach's world elements: a study in natural philosophy. Dordrecht, Springer.
Pages: 17-26
DOI: 10.1007/978-94-017-0175-4_2
Full citation:
Banks Erik C. (2003) The Viennese background, In: Ernst Mach's world elements, Dordrecht, Springer, 17–26.