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Peter Hacker's Insight and Illusion is a thoroughly comprehensive examination of the evolution of Wittgenstein's thought from the Tractatus to his later 'mature' phase. This third edition is a reprint of the revised and corrected 1989 edition, with a new foreword by Constantine Sandis.
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Peter Hacker's Insight and Illusion is a thoroughly comprehensive examination of the evolution of Wittgenstein's thought from the Tractatus to his later 'mature' phase. This third edition is a reprint of the revised and corrected 1989 edition, with a new foreword by Constantine Sandis.
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Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Anthem Press
- Seitenzahl: 368
- Erscheinungstermin: 15. Februar 2021
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 216mm x 140mm x 22mm
- Gewicht: 519g
- ISBN-13: 9781785276866
- ISBN-10: 1785276867
- Artikelnr.: 61323167
- Verlag: Anthem Press
- Seitenzahl: 368
- Erscheinungstermin: 15. Februar 2021
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 216mm x 140mm x 22mm
- Gewicht: 519g
- ISBN-13: 9781785276866
- ISBN-10: 1785276867
- Artikelnr.: 61323167
P.M.S. Hacker is the leading authority on the philosophy of Wittgenstein. He has specialized in philosophy and cognitive neuroscience. He has written a four-volume tetralogy on human nature of which three have been published.
LIST OF ABBREVIATIONS
I. WITTGENSTEIN'S EARLY CONCEPTION OF PHILOSOPHY
1. Background
2. The 'Preliminary' on Philosophy
3. Philosophy and Illusion 4. Philosophy as Critique and as Analysis
II. THE DIALOGUE WITH FREGE AND RUSSELL
1. Agreements and Disagreements
2. The Grundgedanke of the Tractatus
3. The Laws of Logic
4. A Prelude to Conventionalism
III. MEANING, METAPHYSICS, AND THE MIND
1. The Picture Theory of Meaning
2. The Metaphysics of the Tractatus
3. Connecting Language with Reality: The Role of the Mind
IV. EMPIRICAL REALISM AND TRANSCENDENTAL SOLIPSISM
1. The Self of Solipsism
2. 'I Am My World'
3. 'The Limits of Language Mean the Limits of My World'
4. Later Years
V. DISINTEGRATION AND RECONSTRUCTION
1. The Colour-Exclusion Problem
2. Dismantling the Tractatus
3. The Brouwer Lecture
4. Moving off in Fresh Directions
5. The Vienna Circle and Wittgenstein's Principle of Verification
VI. WITTGENSTEIN'S LATER CONCEPTION OF PHILOSOPHY
1. A Kink in the Evolution of Philosophy
2. A Cure for the Sickness of the Understanding
3. Philosophy, Science, and Description
4. Philosophy and Ordinary Language
5. The Phenomenology and Sources of Philosophical Illusion
6. Systematic Philosophy
VII. METAPHYSICS AS THE SHADOW OF GRAMMAR
1. Grammar
2. The Autonomy of Grammar
3. Grammar and Metaphysics
4. A Note on Kant and Wittgenstein
VIII. THE REFUTATION OF SOLIPSISM
1. Introduction
2. From Transcendental Solipsism to Methodological Solipsism
3. The Solipsist's Predicament: A Restatement and Second Diagnosis
4. The Refutation
IX. PRIVATE LINGUISTS AND PUBLIC SPEAKERS
1. A Disease of the Intellect
2. Following Rules
3. Philosophical Investigations
4. The Private Language
5. The Epistemology of the Private Linguist
6. Wittgenstein's Criticism of the Private Language
7. 'Only I Know' and 'Only I have'
X. 'A CLOUD OF PHILOSOPHY CONDENSED INTO A DROP OF GRAMMAR'
1. Can One Know That One Is in Pain?
2. Self-Consciousness: the Overthrow of the Cartesian Picture
3. The 'Inner' and the 'Outer'
4. Experience and Its Natural Expression
5. Avowals and Descriptions
6. Objections and Deflections
XI. CRITERIA, REALISM, AND ANTI-REALISM
1. The Origin of the Idea
2. Plotting the Contour-lines
3. Further Complications
4. Red Herrings: Realism and Anti-Realism
INDEX.
I. WITTGENSTEIN'S EARLY CONCEPTION OF PHILOSOPHY
1. Background
2. The 'Preliminary' on Philosophy
3. Philosophy and Illusion 4. Philosophy as Critique and as Analysis
II. THE DIALOGUE WITH FREGE AND RUSSELL
1. Agreements and Disagreements
2. The Grundgedanke of the Tractatus
3. The Laws of Logic
4. A Prelude to Conventionalism
III. MEANING, METAPHYSICS, AND THE MIND
1. The Picture Theory of Meaning
2. The Metaphysics of the Tractatus
3. Connecting Language with Reality: The Role of the Mind
IV. EMPIRICAL REALISM AND TRANSCENDENTAL SOLIPSISM
1. The Self of Solipsism
2. 'I Am My World'
3. 'The Limits of Language Mean the Limits of My World'
4. Later Years
V. DISINTEGRATION AND RECONSTRUCTION
1. The Colour-Exclusion Problem
2. Dismantling the Tractatus
3. The Brouwer Lecture
4. Moving off in Fresh Directions
5. The Vienna Circle and Wittgenstein's Principle of Verification
VI. WITTGENSTEIN'S LATER CONCEPTION OF PHILOSOPHY
1. A Kink in the Evolution of Philosophy
2. A Cure for the Sickness of the Understanding
3. Philosophy, Science, and Description
4. Philosophy and Ordinary Language
5. The Phenomenology and Sources of Philosophical Illusion
6. Systematic Philosophy
VII. METAPHYSICS AS THE SHADOW OF GRAMMAR
1. Grammar
2. The Autonomy of Grammar
3. Grammar and Metaphysics
4. A Note on Kant and Wittgenstein
VIII. THE REFUTATION OF SOLIPSISM
1. Introduction
2. From Transcendental Solipsism to Methodological Solipsism
3. The Solipsist's Predicament: A Restatement and Second Diagnosis
4. The Refutation
IX. PRIVATE LINGUISTS AND PUBLIC SPEAKERS
1. A Disease of the Intellect
2. Following Rules
3. Philosophical Investigations
4. The Private Language
5. The Epistemology of the Private Linguist
6. Wittgenstein's Criticism of the Private Language
7. 'Only I Know' and 'Only I have'
X. 'A CLOUD OF PHILOSOPHY CONDENSED INTO A DROP OF GRAMMAR'
1. Can One Know That One Is in Pain?
2. Self-Consciousness: the Overthrow of the Cartesian Picture
3. The 'Inner' and the 'Outer'
4. Experience and Its Natural Expression
5. Avowals and Descriptions
6. Objections and Deflections
XI. CRITERIA, REALISM, AND ANTI-REALISM
1. The Origin of the Idea
2. Plotting the Contour-lines
3. Further Complications
4. Red Herrings: Realism and Anti-Realism
INDEX.
LIST OF ABBREVIATIONS
I. WITTGENSTEIN'S EARLY CONCEPTION OF PHILOSOPHY
1. Background
2. The 'Preliminary' on Philosophy
3. Philosophy and Illusion 4. Philosophy as Critique and as Analysis
II. THE DIALOGUE WITH FREGE AND RUSSELL
1. Agreements and Disagreements
2. The Grundgedanke of the Tractatus
3. The Laws of Logic
4. A Prelude to Conventionalism
III. MEANING, METAPHYSICS, AND THE MIND
1. The Picture Theory of Meaning
2. The Metaphysics of the Tractatus
3. Connecting Language with Reality: The Role of the Mind
IV. EMPIRICAL REALISM AND TRANSCENDENTAL SOLIPSISM
1. The Self of Solipsism
2. 'I Am My World'
3. 'The Limits of Language Mean the Limits of My World'
4. Later Years
V. DISINTEGRATION AND RECONSTRUCTION
1. The Colour-Exclusion Problem
2. Dismantling the Tractatus
3. The Brouwer Lecture
4. Moving off in Fresh Directions
5. The Vienna Circle and Wittgenstein's Principle of Verification
VI. WITTGENSTEIN'S LATER CONCEPTION OF PHILOSOPHY
1. A Kink in the Evolution of Philosophy
2. A Cure for the Sickness of the Understanding
3. Philosophy, Science, and Description
4. Philosophy and Ordinary Language
5. The Phenomenology and Sources of Philosophical Illusion
6. Systematic Philosophy
VII. METAPHYSICS AS THE SHADOW OF GRAMMAR
1. Grammar
2. The Autonomy of Grammar
3. Grammar and Metaphysics
4. A Note on Kant and Wittgenstein
VIII. THE REFUTATION OF SOLIPSISM
1. Introduction
2. From Transcendental Solipsism to Methodological Solipsism
3. The Solipsist's Predicament: A Restatement and Second Diagnosis
4. The Refutation
IX. PRIVATE LINGUISTS AND PUBLIC SPEAKERS
1. A Disease of the Intellect
2. Following Rules
3. Philosophical Investigations
4. The Private Language
5. The Epistemology of the Private Linguist
6. Wittgenstein's Criticism of the Private Language
7. 'Only I Know' and 'Only I have'
X. 'A CLOUD OF PHILOSOPHY CONDENSED INTO A DROP OF GRAMMAR'
1. Can One Know That One Is in Pain?
2. Self-Consciousness: the Overthrow of the Cartesian Picture
3. The 'Inner' and the 'Outer'
4. Experience and Its Natural Expression
5. Avowals and Descriptions
6. Objections and Deflections
XI. CRITERIA, REALISM, AND ANTI-REALISM
1. The Origin of the Idea
2. Plotting the Contour-lines
3. Further Complications
4. Red Herrings: Realism and Anti-Realism
INDEX.
I. WITTGENSTEIN'S EARLY CONCEPTION OF PHILOSOPHY
1. Background
2. The 'Preliminary' on Philosophy
3. Philosophy and Illusion 4. Philosophy as Critique and as Analysis
II. THE DIALOGUE WITH FREGE AND RUSSELL
1. Agreements and Disagreements
2. The Grundgedanke of the Tractatus
3. The Laws of Logic
4. A Prelude to Conventionalism
III. MEANING, METAPHYSICS, AND THE MIND
1. The Picture Theory of Meaning
2. The Metaphysics of the Tractatus
3. Connecting Language with Reality: The Role of the Mind
IV. EMPIRICAL REALISM AND TRANSCENDENTAL SOLIPSISM
1. The Self of Solipsism
2. 'I Am My World'
3. 'The Limits of Language Mean the Limits of My World'
4. Later Years
V. DISINTEGRATION AND RECONSTRUCTION
1. The Colour-Exclusion Problem
2. Dismantling the Tractatus
3. The Brouwer Lecture
4. Moving off in Fresh Directions
5. The Vienna Circle and Wittgenstein's Principle of Verification
VI. WITTGENSTEIN'S LATER CONCEPTION OF PHILOSOPHY
1. A Kink in the Evolution of Philosophy
2. A Cure for the Sickness of the Understanding
3. Philosophy, Science, and Description
4. Philosophy and Ordinary Language
5. The Phenomenology and Sources of Philosophical Illusion
6. Systematic Philosophy
VII. METAPHYSICS AS THE SHADOW OF GRAMMAR
1. Grammar
2. The Autonomy of Grammar
3. Grammar and Metaphysics
4. A Note on Kant and Wittgenstein
VIII. THE REFUTATION OF SOLIPSISM
1. Introduction
2. From Transcendental Solipsism to Methodological Solipsism
3. The Solipsist's Predicament: A Restatement and Second Diagnosis
4. The Refutation
IX. PRIVATE LINGUISTS AND PUBLIC SPEAKERS
1. A Disease of the Intellect
2. Following Rules
3. Philosophical Investigations
4. The Private Language
5. The Epistemology of the Private Linguist
6. Wittgenstein's Criticism of the Private Language
7. 'Only I Know' and 'Only I have'
X. 'A CLOUD OF PHILOSOPHY CONDENSED INTO A DROP OF GRAMMAR'
1. Can One Know That One Is in Pain?
2. Self-Consciousness: the Overthrow of the Cartesian Picture
3. The 'Inner' and the 'Outer'
4. Experience and Its Natural Expression
5. Avowals and Descriptions
6. Objections and Deflections
XI. CRITERIA, REALISM, AND ANTI-REALISM
1. The Origin of the Idea
2. Plotting the Contour-lines
3. Further Complications
4. Red Herrings: Realism and Anti-Realism
INDEX.