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Détails
| Personne nommée : | Ludwig Wittgenstein |
|---|---|
| Type d’ouvrage : | Document, Ressource Internet |
| Format : | Ressource Internet, Fichier informatique |
| Tous les auteurs / collaborateurs : |
David Boersema |
| ISBN : | 9780262026604 0262026600 |
| Numéro OCLC : | 767089024 |
| Description : | 1 online resource (xi, 279 s.) |
| Responsabilité : | David Boersema. |
Critiques
Synopsis de l’éditeur
"Boersema's Pragmatism and Reference is a most intelligent compendium on the analysis of reference ranging over a remarkably varied 20th-century literature, bent on assessing with clarity and precision the effective superiority of pragmatist accounts over the better-known analytic theories. Boersema makes a compelling case. I'm not aware of a better overview. Readers will revisit its very sensible argument and appreciate the abundance and convenience of the texts Boersema has collected."--Joseph Margolis, Department of Philosophy, Temple University "Boersema shows that pragmatism provides the resources for a valuable critique of and a viable alternative to currently dominant theories of reference. Drawing on the work of the classical pragmatists and their American and European heirs, such as Putnam, Rorty, Habermas, and Apel, he argues that reference is social rather than individual, and forward looking rather than backward looking. His scholarship is fair-minded and astonishingly comprehensive. He seems to have read and synthesized the entire corpus of each of the philosophers he discusses."--Catherine Z. Elgin, Harvard University -- Catherine Elgin "Boersema shows that pragmatism provides the resources for a valuable critique of and a viable alternative to currently dominant theories of reference. Drawing on the work of the classical pragmatists and their American and European heirs, such as Putnam, Rorty, Habermas, and Apel, he argues that reference is social rather than individual, and forward looking rather than backward looking. His scholarship is fair-minded and astonishingly comprehensive. He seems to have read and synthesized the entire corpus of each of the philosophers he discusses." -- Catherine Z. Elgin , Harvard University Lire la suite...
