PHILOSOPHICAL ANALYSIS IN THE TWENTIETH CENTURY (2 VOLUMES)

31/ 10/ 2021

This is a major, wide-ranging history of analytic philosophy since 1900, told by one of the tradition’s leading contemporary figures. The first volume takes the story from 1900 to mid-century. The second brings the history up to date.

As Scott Soames tells it, the story of analytic philosophy is one of great but uneven progress, with leading thinkers making important advances toward solving the tradition’s core problems. Though no broad philosophical position ever achieved lasting dominance, Soames argues that two methodological developments have, over time, remade the philosophical landscape. These are (1) analytic philosophers’ hard-won success in understanding, and distinguishing the notions of logical truth, a priori truth, and necessary truth, and (2) gradual acceptance of the idea that philosophical speculation must be grounded in sound prephilosophical thought. Though Soames views this history in a positive light, he also illustrates the difficulties, false starts, and disappointments endured along the way. As he engages with the work of his predecessors and contemporaries — from Bertrand Russell and Ludwig Wittgenstein to Donald Davidson and Saul Kripke — he seeks to highlight their accomplishments while also pinpointing their shortcomings, especially where their perspectives were limited by an incomplete grasp of matters that have now become clear.

Soames himself has been at the center of some of the tradition’s most important debates, and throughout writes with exceptional ease about its often complex ideas. His gift for clear exposition makes the history as accessible to advanced undergraduates as it will be important to scholars. Despite its centrality to philosophy in the English-speaking world, the analytic tradition in philosophy has had very few synthetic histories. This will be the benchmark against which all future accounts will be measured.

Table of contents, volume 1

Acknowledgments

Introduction to the Two Volumes

PART ONE: G. E. MOORE ON ETHICS, EPISTEMOLOGY, AND PHILOSOPHICAL ANALYSIS

CHAPTER 1: Common Sense and Philosophical Analysis

CHAPTER 2: Moore on Skepticism, Perception, and Knowledge

CHAPTER 3: Moore on Goodness and the Foundations of Ethics

CHAPTER 4: The Legacies and Lost Opportunities of Moore’s Ethics

PART TWO: BERTRAND RUSSELL ON LOGICAL AND LINGUISTIC ANALYSIS

CHAPTER 5: Logical Form, Grammatical Form, and the Theory of Descriptions

CHAPTER 6: Logic and Mathematics: The Logicist Reduction

CHAPTER 7: Logical Constructions and the External World

CHAPTER 8: Russell’s Logical Atomism

PART THREE: LUDWIG WITTGENSTEIN’S TRACTATUS

CHAPTER 9: The Metaphysics of the Tractatus

CHAPTER 10: Meaning, Truth, and Logic in the Tractatus

CHAPTER 11: The Tractarian Test of Intelligibility and Its Consequences

PART FOUR: LOGICAL POSITIVISM, EMOTIVISM, AND ETHICS

CHAPTER 12: The Logical Positivists on Necessity and Apriori Knowledge

CHAPTER 13: The Rise and Fall of the Empiricist Criterion of Meaning

CHAPTER 14: Emotivism and Its Critics

CHAPTER 15: Normative Ethics in the Era of Emotivism: The Anticonsequentialism of Sir David Ross

PART FIVE: THE POST-POSITIVIST PERSPECTIVE OF THE EARLY W. V. QUINE

CHAPTER 16: The Analytic and the Synthetic, the Necessary and the Possible, the Apriori and the Aposteriori

CHAPTER 17: Meaning and Holistic Verificationism

Index

Table of contents, volume 2

Acknowledgments

Introduction to Volume 2

PART ONE: LUDWIG WITTGENSTEIN’S PHILOSOPHICAL INVESTIGATIONS

CHAPTER 1: Rejection of the Tractarian Conception of Language and Analysis

CHAPTER 2: Rule Following and the Private Language Argument

PART TWO: CLASSICS OF ORDINARY LANGUAGE PHILOSOPHY: TRUTH, GOODNESS, THE MIND, AND ANALYSIS

CHAPTER 3: Ryle’s Dilemmas

CHAPTER 4: Ryle’s Concept of Mind

CHAPTER 5: Strawson’s Performative Theory of Truth

CHAPTER 6: Hare’s Performative Theory of Goodness

PART THREE: MORE CLASSICS OF ORDINARY LANGUAGE PHILOSOPHY: THE RESPONSE TO RADICAL SKEPTICISM

CHAPTER 7: Malcolm’s Paradigm Case Argument

CHAPTER 8: Austin’s Sense and Sensibilia

PART FOUR: PAUL GRICE AND THE END OF ORDINARY LANGUAGE PHILOSOPHY

CHAPTER 9: Language Use and the Logic of Conversation

PART FIVE: THE PHILOSOPHICAL NATURALISM OF WILLARD VAN ORMAN QUINE

CHAPTER 10: The Indeterminacy of Translation

CHAPTER 11: Quine’s Radical Semantic Eliminativism

PART SIX: DONALD DAVIDSON ON TRUTH AND MEANING

CHAPTER 12: Theories of Truth as Theories of Meaning

CHAPTER 13: Truth, Interpretation, and the Alleged Unintelligibility of Alternative Conceptual Schemes

PART SEVEN: SAUL KRIPKE ON NAMING AND NECESSITY

CHAPTER 14 Names, Essence, and Possibility

CHAPTER 15: The Necessary Aposteriori

CHAPTER 16: The Contingent Apriori

CHAPTER 17: Natural Kind Terms and Theoretical Identification Statements

EPILOGUE: The Era of Specialization

Index

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