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G.H. von Wright, G.E. Moore's and Wittgenstein's successor, and John Wisdom's predecessor as a Professor of Philosophy in Cambridge, wrote in 1993: "The history of the øanalytical! movement has not yet been written in full. With its increased diversification, it becomes pertinent to try to identify its most essential features and distinguish them from later additions which are alien to its origins." In the same year A.J. Ayer's successor as a Wykeham Professor of Logic in Oxford, M. Dummett noted: "I hope that such a history will be written: it would be fascinating." The task of this book is…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
G.H. von Wright, G.E. Moore's and Wittgenstein's successor, and John Wisdom's predecessor as a Professor of Philosophy in Cambridge, wrote in 1993: "The history of the øanalytical! movement has not yet been written in full. With its increased diversification, it becomes pertinent to try to identify its most essential features and distinguish them from later additions which are alien to its origins." In the same year A.J. Ayer's successor as a Wykeham Professor of Logic in Oxford, M. Dummett noted: "I hope that such a history will be written: it would be fascinating." The task of this book is to fulfill these hopes. For it Sir P.F. Strawson noted: Milkov's "analysis of my own philosophical work which is to form part of his book on English philosophy in this century...is thoroughly comprehensive and shows a good understanding and much sympathetic insight."
Autorenporträt
The Author: Nikolay Milkov was born in 1953 in Varna, Bulgaria. After studying Philosophy at the University of Sofia (1974-78), he did post-graduate work in history of Philosophy at the University of Moscow (1979-83). Since 1983 N. Milkov is a Research Fellow at the Bulgarian Academy of Sciences. In 1988 he translated L. Wittgenstein's Tractatus, PI and RFM into Bulgarian. From 1989 until 1996 Milkov was a Guest Research Fellow at the University of Bielefeld, Germany. He is the author of Kaleidoscopic Mind: An Essay in Post-Wittgensteinian Philosophy, Amsterdam: Rodopi, 1992.