A HISTORY OF THE QUEST FOR PHILOSOPHICAL CLARITY FROM DESCARTES TO WITTGENSTEIN:
“We Can Only Understand What We Ourselves Have Made”
Author: | Roscoe, John |
Year: | 2011 |
Pages: | 292 |
ISBN: | 0-7734-1563-7 978-0-7734-1563-8 |
Price: | $199.95 |
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This work examines the philosophical positions of the canonical thinkers of the Western tradition from Descartes to Wittgenstein. It argues that philosophical discourse becomes confused whenever it has no explicit semantic basis.
Reviews
“…the story of philosophy since the time of Descartes is revealed as a coherent evolution towards the interesting position which [the author] himself would champion.”-Prof. Bjoern-Olav Roaldseth, Stavanger University
“In this carefully articulated essay, [the author] reconstructs the development of a general philosophical position which can justifiably be claimed as the background of the most advanced thinking in our own time.”-Prof. J. O. C. Vlator, University of Basel
Table of Contents
Preface
Introduction
I The Confusions of Rene Descartes
II The Confusions of John Locke
III The Confusions of George Berkeley
IV The Confusions of David Hume
V The Confusions of Immanuel Kant
VI The Confusions of Georg Friedrich
Wilhelm Hegel
VII The Confusions of Friedrich Nietzsche
VIII The Confusions of Martin Heidegger
IX Confusions of Philosophy
X The Confusions of Jean-Paul Sartre
XI The Confusions of Ludwig Johan
Wittgenstein
Conclusion
Chronology
Bibliography
Index