Gutscheinbedingungen

*Gültig bis 20.07.2026 auf alle Bücher. Ausgeschlossen sind Zeitschriften, Prozentbücher und Abos | Einlösbar in allen Buchhandlungen von Orell Füssli, Barth Bücher, Buchladen Rapunzel, Papeterie Köhler, Schuler Orell Füssli, Stauffacher und ZAP unter Vorweisung des Gutscheins, auf www.orellfüssli.ch durch Eingabe des Gutscheincodes. Beim Service „eBooks verschenken“ und bei eBook-Käufen via eReader nicht einlösbar | Mindesteinkaufswert: Fr. 30.- | Nicht mit anderen Rabatten kumulierbar.

Produktbild: Rule-Following & Realism Rev/e

Rule-Following & Realism Rev/e

Fr. 72.90

inkl. gesetzl. MwSt., Versandkostenfrei


Beschreibung

Produktdetails

Einband

Taschenbuch

Erscheinungsdatum

01.04.2001

Verlag

University Presses

Seitenzahl

388

Maße (L/B/H)

22.9/15.2/2 cm

Gewicht

435 g

Sprache

Englisch

ISBN

978-0-674-00555-6

Beschreibung

Produktdetails

Einband

Taschenbuch

Erscheinungsdatum

01.04.2001

Verlag

University Presses

Seitenzahl

388

Maße (L/B/H)

22.9/15.2/2 cm

Gewicht

435 g

Sprache

Englisch

ISBN

978-0-674-00555-6

Noch keine Bewertungen vorhanden

Verfassen Sie die erste Bewertung zu diesem Artikel

Helfen Sie anderen Kundinnen und Kunden durch Ihre Meinung.

Kundinnen und Kunden meinen

Bewertungen (0)

  • Produktbild: Rule-Following & Realism Rev/e
  • ACKNOWLEDGMENTS INTRODUCTION Topics and Aims Structure of the Book and Links between the Topics Method PART 1: Rule-Following CHAPTER 1: Kripke's Skepticism about Meaning Assertion and Meaning Kripke's Dialectical Skepticism A First Look at Kripke's Understanding of Meaning Assertion, Meaning, Truth Conditions, and Rules The Rule Determines My Answer Following and Being Guided by a Rule The Normativity of Assertion and Meaning Normativity, Past Intentions, and Future Use Kripke's Skeptical Strategy Kripke's Skeptical Challenge The Challenge to Cite Facts That Determine What We Meant Kripke's Skeptical Arguments Kripke's Skeptical Conclusion Kripke's Objectifying Move Kripke's Metaphysical Realism CHAPTER 2: Quine's Scientific Skepticism about Meaning Dialectical Skepticism Contrasted with Scientific Skepticism Quine's Scientific Naturalism Naturalized Epistemology Posits and Reality From Naturalized Epistemology to Indeterminacy of Translation Collateral Information and Stimulus Meaning Inscrutability of Reference The Limits of Objective Translation Underdetermination and Indeterminacy Inscrutability of Reference and Acquiescing in Our Mother Tongue Logic, Disquotation, and Indeterminacy L Quine's Objectifying Move Quine's Objectifying Move Contrasted with Kripke's CHAPTER 3: The Very Idea of a Participant Perspective Toward a New Way of Looking at Meaning and Assertion A Metaphysical Critique of Scientific Naturalism The Fallacy of Subtraction Is Quine's Scientific Naturalism a Kind of Idealism? A Metaphilosophical Moral A First Look at McDowell's Strategy McDowell's Critique of Kripke McDowell's Critique of Wright McDowell's Trancendental Argument and the Middle Course Two Problematic Assumptions of McDowell's Argument A Metaphysical Realist Critique of McDowell's Arguments and His Middle Course A Reply from Wright A Reply from Quine Do These Criticisms Rest on a Misunderstanding of McDowell? The Methodological Moral My Strategy in the Rest of the Book PART 2: The Analytic-Synthetic Distinction CHAPTER 4: Carnap's Analytic-Synthetic Distinction Carnap's Project: The Codification of a Methodology for Rational Inquiry Pure and Descriptive Semantics, Explicit Rules, and Language Systems The Principle of Tolerance A First Sketch of the Pragmatic Roots of Carnap's Analytic-Synthetic Distinction Quine's Criticism of the Thesis That Logic Is True by Convention Carnap's Pragmatic Approach to Codifying Rules for Inquiry Mistakes and Discoveries in Logic and Mathematics 'Analytic in L' in Terms of State Descriptions 'Analytic in L' in Terms of State Descriptions and Meaning Postulates Pure and Descriptive Semantics Reichenbach's Coordinative Definitions The Analogy between Physical Geometry and Descriptive Semantics Beth's Criticism of Pure Semantics Carnap's Reply to Beth CHAPTER 5: Quine's Reasons for Rejecting Carnap's Analytic-Synthetic Distinction A Strategy for Clarifying Quine's Dispute with Carnap A Puzzling Exchange between Carnap and Quine Carnap and Quine on Language and Logic Carnap and Quine on the Interpretation of Artificial Notations Quine on Truth by Convention Again Preliminaries for Understanding Quine's Critique of Analyticity Definition and Interchangeability Semantical Rules Postulates, Semantical Rules, and the Task of Logic Indeterminacy and Carnap's Analytic-Synthetic Distinction Does Carnap Need a Criterion of Analyticity? Holism and the Analytic-Synthetic Distinction Carnap's Method versus Quine's Doctrine CHAPTER 6: Putnam's Reasons for Rejecting Carnap's Analytic-Synthetic Distinction Putnam and the Participant Perspective The Roots and Strategy of Putnam's Arguments Changes in Belief versus Changes in Reference Law-Cluster Concepts and Terms Framework Principles and the Contextually A Priori An Objection from Carnap's Point of View A Reply from Putnam's Point of View Analyticity and One-Criterion Words The Method behind Putnam's Criticisms Why Putnam's Critique of the Analytic-Synthetic Distinction is Incompatible with Quine's Against Indeterminacy Four Preliminary Concerns PART 3: Anti-Individualism CHAPTER 7: From the Rejection of the Analytic Synthetic Distinction to Anti-Individualism The Participant Perspective and Anti-Individualism Sameness of Reference despite Radical Changes in Belief Idiolects, Disquotation and Changes in Belief Kripke's Causal Picture of Reference Putnam's Assimilation of Kripke's Causal Picture of Reference Two Roles for the Causal Picture of Reference The Division of Linguistic Labor and the Contribution of the Environment The Standard Metaphysical Picture of the Contribution of the Environment Two Versions of the Standard Metaphysical Picture Donnellan's Puzzle Vernacular Natural Kinds and Artifact Terms The Division of Linguistic Labor across Time Against Metaphysical Realism Our Linguistic Obligations Putnam's Causal Picture of Reference and Anti-Individualism CHAPTER 8: Participation, Deference, and Dialectic Anti-Individualism from Putnam to Burge Burge's Starting Point, Content Clauses, and Notions Step One of Burge's Arthritis Thought Experiment Steps Two and Three of Burge's Arthritis Thought Experiment Norms for Understanding, Conventional Linguistic Meaning, and Cognitive Value Complete and Incomplete Understanding and the Structure of Burge's Thought Experiments Essentialism and Rationalism about Notions A Strategy for Deflating Burge's Anti-Individualism Hare on Dancing the Eightsome Reel Burge's Dialectic Deflated A Deflationary View of Truth, Notions, and CHAPTER 9: Realism, Self-Knowledge, and Skepticism A Challenge from within the Participant Perspective Realism and Self-Knowledge in Context Self-Knowledge and Metalinguistic Beliefs Problematic Possibilities Why Skepticism about Self-Knowledge Is Incoherent The Misunderstanding behind Skepticism about Self-Knowledge Problematic Possibilities Disarmed Empirical Presuppositions and Skeptical Possibilities Two More Problematic Possibilities Empirical Presuppositions and Skeptical Possibilities Again Does Anti-Individualism Beg the Question against Skepticism? Truth and the Absolute Conception of Reality Nagel's Abstract Skepticism The Dissolution of the Absolute Conception of Reality CHAPTER 10: Anti-Individualism and Rule-Following Rule-Following Reconsidered Kripke's Dialectical Skepticism Rule-Following from the Participant Perspective How to Resist Kripke's Picture of Meaning and Assertion A Skeptical Reply Quine's Scientific Skepticism How to Resist Quine's Picture of Meaning and Assertion A Quinean Reply NOTES INDEX