Grammar in Early Twentieth-Century PhilosophyRichard Gaskin Routledge, 15.04.2013 - 272 Seiten This book is a systematic and historical exploration of the philosophical significance of grammar. In the first half of the twentieth century, and in particular in the writings of Frege, Husserl, Russell, Carnap and Wittgenstein, there was sustained philosophical reflection on the nature of grammar, and on the relevance of grammar to metaphysics, logic and science. |
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... Thought (1995), and An Introduction to Non-Classical Logic (2001). In addition, he has published numerous papers on logic, metaphysics, and the history of philosophy. Ian Proops is Assistant Professor of Philosophy at the University.
... Thought (1995), and An Introduction to Non-Classical Logic (2001). In addition, he has published numerous papers on logic, metaphysics, and the history of philosophy. Ian Proops is Assistant Professor of Philosophy at the University.
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... thought of as belonging exclusively to the history of the subject; but it is, happily, hard to see any such relegation occurring in the near future. My introduction, aside from being an attempt in its own right to make a contribution to ...
... thought of as belonging exclusively to the history of the subject; but it is, happily, hard to see any such relegation occurring in the near future. My introduction, aside from being an attempt in its own right to make a contribution to ...
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... thought, or may occur in any true or false proposition, or can be counted as one, I call a term.... A man, a moment, a number, a class, a relation, a chimaera, or anything else that can be mentioned, is sure to be a term. (1903: 43) ...
... thought, or may occur in any true or false proposition, or can be counted as one, I call a term.... A man, a moment, a number, a class, a relation, a chimaera, or anything else that can be mentioned, is sure to be a term. (1903: 43) ...
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... Thoughts (Gedanken), at the level of sense: its constituents are then appropriately conceived as senses, rather than the objects presented by those senses. If we ask where facts are located in the metaphysical economy, assuming that ...
... Thoughts (Gedanken), at the level of sense: its constituents are then appropriately conceived as senses, rather than the objects presented by those senses. If we ask where facts are located in the metaphysical economy, assuming that ...
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... thoughts in the sense of what can be thought (thinkables) as opposed to acts or episodes of thinking. The identity displays facts, things that are the case, as thoughts in that sense – the thinkables that are the case. (1994: 179) Now ...
... thoughts in the sense of what can be thought (thinkables) as opposed to acts or episodes of thinking. The identity displays facts, things that are the case, as thoughts in that sense – the thinkables that are the case. (1994: 179) Now ...
Inhalt
Frege and the grammar of truth | |
Husserls tactics of meaning | |
Logical form general sentences and Russells path to On Denoting | |
Grammar ontology and truth in Russell and Bradley | |
A few more remarks on logical form | |
Logical syntax in the Tractatus | |
Wittgenstein on grammar meaning and essence | |
Nonsense and necessity in Wittgensteins mature philosophy | |
Carnaps logical syntax | |
Heidegger and the grammar of being | |
Index | |
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
accept acquainted analysis analytic analytic philosophy argued argument arithmetical atomic sentences Begriffsschrift Bertrand Russell Bradley Cambridge Candlish Carnap Carnapian intension categorial grammar claim complex concept-word conceptual content constituents corresponding declarative sentence definite descriptions denoting concepts denoting phrases distinction Dummett entities essence example fact factual content false formal Frege Fregean Geach given Gödel’s grammatical form grammatical subject green Heidegger hence Husserl Hylton intersubstitutability language system level of reference linguistic logical form logical subject logical syntax meaning meaningful Meinong metaphysics Moorean Russell negation nonsense notion noun phrase objects ostensive definitions Oxford Philosophy predicate proper names propositional functions quantifier phrases question reality reject relation rules Russell holds Russell’s Russellian propositions semantic sense sense and reference singular term Socrates speak surface form symbol syntactic theory of denoting theory of descriptions Theory of Types things thought Tractatus transparency thesis true truth truth-value understanding University Press verb Wittgenstein words