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A fresh and compelling portrait of the birth of modern analytic philosophy, viewed through the lens of a detailed study of the work of the four philosophers who contributed most to shaping it: Gottlob Frege, Bertrand Russell, Ludwig Wittgenstein, and Frank Ramsey.
In this book Michael Potter offers a fresh and compelling portrait of the birth of modern analytic philosophy, viewed through the lens of a detailed study of the work of the four philosophers who contributed most to shaping it: Gottlob Frege, Bertrand Russell, Ludwig Wittgenstein, and Frank Ramsey. It covers the remarkable period of discovery that began with the publication of Frege's Begriffsschrift in 1879 and ended with Ramsey's death in 1930. Potter-one of the most influential scholars of this period in philosophy-presents a deep but accessible account of the break with absolute idealism and neo-Kantianism, and the emergence of approaches that exploited the newly discovered methods in logic. Like his subjects, Potter focusses principally on philosophical logic, philosophy of mathematics, and metaphysics, but he also discusses epistemology, meta-ethics, and the philosophy of language. The book is an essential starting point for any student attempting to understand the work of Frege, Russell, Wittgenstein, and Ramsey, as well as their interactions and their larger intellectual milieux. It will also be of interest to anyone who wants to cast light on current philosophical problems through a better understanding of their origins.
"The book is an impressive achievement, and it will be an important contribution to the literature on Frege, Russell, Wittgenstein, Ramsey, and the history of early analytic philosophy. I thoroughly enjoyed reading it and learned a lot from it. It is not only a state-of-the-art contribution to scholarship but will also be a valuable textbook for courses on the history of early analytic philosophy, or on the work of one or more of the four philosophers discussed." --David G. Stern, University of Iowa, USA "This book is a significant contribution to studies in the history of analytic philosophy and will benefit upper-level undergraduates studying this material for the first time, as well as active researchers in the area." --James Levine, Trinity College Dublin, Ireland
Auteur
Michael Potter is Professor of Logic at Cambridge University, UK, and a Life Fellow of Fitzwilliam College. His studies in the history of analytic philosophy include Reason's Nearest Kin (2000) and Wittgenstein's Notes on Logic (2009). He is also noted for work in the foundations of mathematics, including Set Theory and its Philosophy (2004).
Contenu
Introduction
Part I Frege
Biography
Logic before 1879
Begriffsschrift I: Foundations of logic
Begriffsschrift II: Propositional logic
Begriffsschrift III: Quantification
Begriffsschrift IV: Identity
Begriffsschrift V: The ancestral
Early philosophy of logic
The Hierarchy
Grundlagen I: The context principle
Grundlagen II: Arithmetical truth
Grundlagen III: Numbers
Grundlagen IV: The formal project
Sense and reference I: Singular terms
Sense and reference II: Sentences
Sense anad references III: Concept-words
Grundgesetze I: Types
Grundgesetze II: Extensions
The Frege-Hilbert correspondence
Later writings
Frege's Legacy
Part II Russell
Biography
Bradley
Geometry
McTaggart
German Mathematics
Whitehead
Moore
Leibniz
Peano
Early logicism
Denoting concepts
The contradiction
On denoting
Truth
Types
Middle logicism
Acquaintance
Matter
Pre-war judgement
Facts
Late logicism
Post-war judgement
Neutral monism
Russell's legacy III Wittgenstein
Biography
Facts
Pictures
Propositions
Sense
Wittgenstein's concept-script
Objects
Identity
Solipsism
Ordinary language
Minds
Logic
The metaphysical subject
Arithmetic
Science
Ethics
The mystical
The legacy of the Tractatus IV Ramsey
Biography
Truth
Knowledge
The foundations of mathematics I: Types
The foundations of mathematics II: Logicism
Universals
Degrees of belief
Facts and propositions
Last papers
Ramsey's legacy Bibliography