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Meaning, knowledge, and reality

Autor John McDowell

Editorial HARVARD UNIVERSITY PRESS

Meaning, knowledge, and reality
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  • Publisher HARVARD UNIVERSITY PRESS
  • ISBN13 9780674007123
  • ISBN10 0674007123
  • Type Book
  • Pages 461
  • Published 2001
  • Bookbinding Rustic

Meaning, knowledge, and reality

Autor John McDowell

Editorial HARVARD UNIVERSITY PRESS

-5% disc.    29,90€
28,41€
Save 1,50€
Not available online, but our booksellers can check its availability to give you an estimate of when we might have it ready for you.
Free shipping
Mainland Spain
FREE shipping from €19

to mainland Spain

24/48h shipping

5% discount on all books

FREE pickup at the bookstore

Come and be surprised!

Book Details

This is the second volume of John McDowell's selected papers. These nineteen essays collectively report on McDowell's involvement, over more than twenty years, with questions about the interface between the philosophies of language and mind and with issues in general epistemology. Throughout, McDowell focuses on questions to do with content: with the nature of content both linguistic and psychological; with what McDowell regards as misguided views about content; and with the form that a proper semantic theory of content should assume. Review of both books by John McDowell: "In a characteristic passage ... [McDowell] is discussing knowledge, but the passage could stand at the head of almost any of the immensely influential essays collected in these two volumes. Reading them together, one is struck by how much they have in common, despite the breadth of issues that they address, ranging from ethics to metaphysics, the theory of knowledge, mind and language. Time and again, McDowell aims to dissolve a philosophical problem by showing that it rests on a false assumption ... What form do McDowell's exorcisms take? They vary, of course, to suit the nature of the problem addressed. But there is a typical McDowellian move, which consists of the rejection of an approach that is so pervasive in contemporary philosophical thinking as to seem inescapable. This approach involves treating such phenomena as perception, knowledge, memory and the content of thought as composite: as consisting of different factors that can obtain independently. And part of the reason why this approach can seem so inescapable is that it starts with reflections that are no more than common sense." —Richard Holton,Times Literary Supplement

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