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Books > Philosophy > Topics in philosophy > Metaphysics & ontology
This is an original and refreshing look at one of the most
important and influential philosophers of the 20th Century. This
book offers a faithful and meticulous reading of Heidegger's magnum
opus, "Being and Time".Martin Heidegger was one of the most
influential philosophers of the 20th century. His analysis of human
existence proves an inexhaustible ground for thinkers of all
backgrounds who seek answers for their specific questions left open
or opened up by our times. This book explores the intrinsic
connection between two fundamentally human traits, language and
death. Heidegger addresses each of these traits in depth, without
ever explicitly outlining their relationship in a separate theory.
However, in a close examination of Heidegger's magnum opus, "Being
and Time", Joachim L. Oberst uncovers a connection in three basic
steps. Ultimately the author argues that the human invention of
language is motivated by the drive towards immortality - language
emerges from the experience of mortality as a response to it. This
is a refreshing look at one of the most challenging and influential
philosophers of our times.
Mind, Brain, and Free Will presents a powerful new case for
substance dualism (the theory that humans consist of two parts body
and soul) and for libertarian free will (that humans have some
freedom to choose between alternatives, independently of the causes
which influence them). Richard Swinburne begins by analysing the
criteria for one event or substance being the same event or
substance as another one, and the criteria for an event being
metaphysically possible; and then goes on to analyse the criteria
for beliefs about these issues being rational or justified. Given
these criteria, he then proceeds to argue that pure mental events
(including conscious events) are distinct from physical events and
interact with them. He claims that no result from neuroscience or
any other science could show that there is no such interaction, and
illustrates this claim by showing that recent scientific work (such
as Libet's experiments) has no tendency whatever to show that our
intentions do not cause brain events. Swinburne goes on to argue
for agent causation, that-to speak precisely-it is we, and not our
intentions, that cause our brain events. It is metaphysically
possible that each of us could acquire a new brain or continue to
exist without a brain; and so we are essentially souls. Brain
events and conscious events are so different from each other that
it would not be possible to establish a scientific theory which
would predict what each of us would do in situations of moral
conflict. Hence given a crucial epistemological principle (the
Principle of Credulity), we should believe that things are as they
seem to be: that we make choices independently of the causes which
influence us. According to Swinburne's lucid and ambitious account,
it follows that we are morally responsible for our actions.
George Molnar came to see that the solution to a number of the problems of contemporary philosophy lay in the development of an alternative to Hume's metaphysics, with real causal powers at its centre. Molnar's eagerly anticipated book setting out his theory of powers was almost complete when he died, and has been prepared for publication by Stephen Mumford, who provides a context-setting introduction.
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Radical Apophasis
(Hardcover)
Todd Ohara; Foreword by Cyril O'Regan
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Minai develops the idea that an aesthetic value is not necessarily
an objective value reasoned by rationality. Beauty is a matter of
chance and necessity in the nature of things, a matter of the order
of things and the circumstances of their interconnections, or
predictable and unpredictable forces. To know such a complex system
we need to establish a view of phenomenology and hermeneutics, a
world view where bad and good and ugly and beautiful are part of a
continuum of changes and differences. In that world view, it is
essential to have an understanding of mind, nature, and the
epistemology of knowing.
There is a lot that we don't know. That means that there are a lot
of possibilities that are, epistemically speaking, open. For
instance, we don't know whether it rained in Seattle yesterday. So,
for us at least, there is an epistemic possibility where it rained
in Seattle yesterday, and one where it did not. What are these
epistemic possibilities? They do not match up with metaphysical
possibilities - there are various cases where something is
epistemically possible but not metaphysically possible, and vice
versa. How do we understand the semantics of statements of
epistemic modality? The ten new essays in this volume explore
various answers to these questions, including those offered by
contextualism, relativism, and expressivism.
This book provides a discussion of the philosophy of being
according to three major traditions in Western philosophy, the
Analytic, the Continental, and the Thomistic. The origin of the
point of view of each of these traditions is associated with a
seminal figure, Gottlob Frege, Immanuel Kant, and Thomas Aquinas,
respectively. The questions addressed in this book are
constitutional for the philosophy of being, considering the meaning
of being, the relationship between thinking and being, and the
methods for using thought to access being. On the one hand, the
book honors diversity and pluralism, as it highlights how the three
traditions may be clearly and distinctly differentiated regarding
the philosophy of being. On the other hand, it honors a sense of
solidarity and ecumenism, as it demonstrates how the methods and
focal points of these traditions constitute, and continue to shape,
the development of Western philosophy. This book contributes toward
an essential overview of Western metaphysics and will be of
particular interest to those working in the history of philosophy
and in the philosophy of being.
This volume collects the most important articles on the metaphysics of modality by noted philosopher Alvin Plantinga. The book chronicles Plantinga's thought from the late 1960's to the present. Plantinga is here concerned with fundamental issues in metaphysics: what is the nature of abstract objects like possible worlds,properties, propositions, and such phenomena? Are there possible but non-actual objects? Can objects that do not exist exemplify properties? In this thorough and searching book, Plantinga addresses these and many other questions that continue to preoccupy philosophers in the field. This volume contains some of the best work in metaphysics from the past 30 years, and will remain a source of critical contention and keen interest among philosophers of metaphysics and philosophical logic for years to come.
Daniel Garber presents an illuminating study of Leibniz's
conception of the physical world. Leibniz's commentators usually
begin with monads, mind-like simple substances, the ultimate
building-blocks of the Monadology. But Leibniz's apparently
idealist metaphysics is very puzzling: how can any sensible person
think that the world is made up of tiny minds? In this book, Garber
tries to make Leibniz's thought intelligible by focusing instead on
his notion of body. Beginning with Leibniz's earliest writings, he
shows how Leibniz starts as a Hobbesian with a robust sense of the
physical world, and how, step by step, he advances to the
monadological metaphysics of his later years. Much of the book's
focus is on Leibniz's middle years, where the fundamental
constituents of the world are corporeal substances, unities of
matter and form understood on the model of animals. For Garber
monads only enter fairly late in Leibniz's career, and when they
enter, he argues, they do not displace bodies but complement them.
In the end, though, Garber argues that Leibniz never works out the
relation between the world of monads and the world of bodies to his
own satisfaction: at the time of his death, his philosophy is still
a work in progress.
There have long been controversies about how it is that minds can
fit into a physical universe. Emergence in Mind presents new essays
by a distinguished group of philosophers investigating whether
mental properties can be said to 'emerge' from the physical
processes in the universe. Such emergence requires mental
properties to be different from physical properties, and much of
the discussion relates to what the consequences of such a
difference might be in areas such as freedom of the will, and the
possibility of scientific explanations of non-physical (for
example, social) phenomena. The volume also extends the debate
about emergence by considering the independence of chemical
properties from physical properties, and investigating what would
need to be the case for there to be groups that could be said to
exercise rationality.
Plotinus (205-269 AD) is considered the founder of Neoplatonism,
the dominant philosophical movement of late antiquity, and a rich
seam of current scholarly interest. Whilst Plotinus' influence on
the subsequent philosophical tradition was enormous, his ideas can
also be seen as the culmination of some implicit trends in the
Greek tradition from Parmenides, Plato, Aristotle, and the Stoics.
Emilsson's in-depth study focuses on Plotinus' notion of Intellect,
which comes second in his hierarchical model of reality, after the
One, unknowable first cause of everything. As opposed to ordinary
human discursive thinking, Intellect's thought is all-at-once,
timeless, truthful and a direct intuition into 'things themselves';
it is presumably not even propositional. Emilsson discusses and
explains this strong notion of non-discursive thought and explores
Plotinus' insistence that this must be the primary form of thought.
Plotinus' doctrine of Intellect raises a host of questions that
Emilsson addresses. First, Intellect's thought is described as an
attempt to grasp the One and at the same time as self-thought. How
are these two claims related? How are they compatible? What lies in
Plotinus' insistence that Intellect's thought is a thought of
itself? Second, Plotinus gives two minimum requirements of thought:
that it must involve a distinction between thinker and object of
thought, and that the object itself must be varied. How are these
two pluralist claims related? Third, what is the relation between
Intellect as a thinker and Intellect as an object of thought?
Plotinus' position here seems to amount to a form of idealism, and
this is explored.
Genuine concern about hell seems to be lost in our past, along with
powdered wigs and witch trials. Although the doctrine has held a
significant place in most traditional theology, probably no part of
the Christian creed has been so widely abandoned, especially by
theologians. Recently, however, there has been renewed interest in
the doctrine, and theologians have been pressed to deal with it.
Jerry L. Walls argues in this book that some traditional views of
hell are still defensible and can be believed with intellectual and
moral integrity. Focusing on the issues from the standpoint of
philosophical theology, Walls explores the doctrine of hell in
relation to both the divine nature and human nature. He argues,
with respect to the divine nature, that some traditional versions
of the doctrine are compatible not only with God's omnipotence and
omniscience, but also with a strong account of His perfect
goodness. The concept of divine goodness receives special attention
since the doctrine of hell is most often rejected on moral grounds.
In addition, Walls maintains that the doctrine of hell is
intelligible from the standpoint of human freedom, since the idea
of a decisive choice of evil is a coherent one. Finally, the book
addresses ontological questions: what is the nature of the
suffering in hell? Is it only psychological and emotional, or does
it also include a physical dimension? Informed by historical
theology and Biblical interpretation, as well as philosophical
theology, Walls concludes by arguing that the traditional doctrine
of hell should not be abandoned unless the case against it is clear
and compelling, both scripturally and philosopically. Because it
involves claims of such immense importance, he continues,
regardless of whether it is reclaimed of discarded, it cannot be
responsibly ignored.
Justification as Ignorance offers an original account of epistemic
justification as both non-factive and luminous, vindicating core
internalist intuitions without construing justification as an
internal condition knowable by reflection alone. Sven Rosenkranz
conceives of justification, in its doxastic and propositional
varieties, as a kind of epistemic possibility of knowing and of
being in a position to know. His account contrasts with recent
alternative views that characterize justification in terms of the
metaphysical possibility of knowing. Instead, he develops a
suitable non-normal multi-modal epistemic logic for knowledge and
being in a position to know that respects the finding that these
notions create hyperintensional contexts. He also defends his
conception of justification against well-known anti-luminosity
arguments, shows that the account allows for fruitful applications
and principled solutions to the lottery and preface paradoxes, and
provides a metaphysics of justification and its varying degrees of
strength that is compatible with core assumptions of the
knowledge-first approach and disjunctivist conceptions of mental
states.
Gonzalo Rodriguez-Pereyra offers a fresh philosophical account of properties. How is it that two different things (such as two red roses) can share the same property (redness)? According to resemblance nominalism, things have their properties in virtue of resembling other things. This unfashionable view is championed with clarity and rigour.
In recent years the majority of scholarship on Aristotle's
philosophy of mind has concentrated on his account of sensation and
has generally sought to find in his ancient account insights
applicable to contemporary materialistic explanations of mental
life. Challenging cognitivist and functionalist interpretations,
this volume argues that Aristotle believed the mind to be unmixed,
or separate from the body. Through careful textual analysis of De
Anima and other key texts, the author shows that the Greek
philosopher made a clear distinction between perception-an activity
realized in material sense organs-and thinking-a process that
cannot occur in any material organ. This innovative interpretation
of Aristotle's theory of cognitive activities is a worthy
contribution to an ongoing debate.
Barry Taylor's book mounts an argument against one of the
fundamental tenets of much contemporary philosophy, the idea that
we can make sense of reality as existing objectively, independently
of our capacities to come to know it. Part One sets the scene by
arguings that traditional realism can be explicated as a doctrine
about truth - that truth is objective, that is, public, bivalent,
and epistemically independent. Part Two, the centrepiece of the
book, shows how a form of Hilary Putnam's model-theoretic argument
demonstrates that no such notion of truth can be founded on the
idea of correspondence, as explained in model-theoretic terms (more
traditional accounts of correspondence having been already disposed
of in Part One). Part Three argues that non-correspondence accounts
of truth - truth as superassertibility or idealized rational
acceptability, formal conceptions of truth, Tarskian truth - also
fail to meet the criteria for objectivity; along the way, it also
dismisses the claims of the latterday views of Putnam, and of
similar views articulated by John McDowell, to constitute a new,
less traditional form of realism. In the Coda, Taylor bolsters some
of the considerations advanced in Part Three in evaluating formal
conceptions of truth, by assessing and rejecting the claims of
Robert Brandom to have combined such an account of truth with a
satisfactory account of semantic structure. He concludes that there
is no defensible notion of truth which preserves the theses of
traditional realism, nor any extant position sufficiently true to
the ideals of that doctrine to inherit its title. So the only
question remaining is which form of antirealism to adopt.
David J. Chalmers constructs a highly ambitious and original
picture of the world, from a few basic elements. He develops and
extends Rudolf Carnap's attempt to do the same in Der Logische
Aufbau Der Welt (1928). Carnap gave a blueprint for describing the
entire world using a limited vocabulary, so that all truths about
the world could be derived from that description--but his Aufbau is
often seen as a noble failure. In Constructing the World, Chalmers
argues that something like the Aufbau project can succeed. With the
right vocabulary and the right derivation relation, we can indeed
construct the world.
The focal point of Chalmers's project is scrutability: roughly, the
thesis that ideal reasoning from a limited class of basic truths
yields all truths about the world. Chalmers first argues for the
scrutability thesis and then considers how small the base can be.
All this can be seen as a project in metaphysical epistemology:
epistemology in service of a global picture of the world and of our
conception thereof.
The scrutability framework has ramifications throughout philosophy.
Using it, Chalmers defends a broadly Fregean approach to meaning,
argues for an internalist approach to the contents of thought, and
rebuts W. V. Quine's arguments against the analytic and the a
priori. He also uses scrutability to analyze the unity of science,
to defend a conceptual approach to metaphysics, and to mount a
structuralist response to skepticism. Based on Chalmers's 2010 John
Locke lectures, Constructing the World opens up debate on central
areas of philosophy including philosophy of language,
consciousness, knowledge, and reality. This major work by a leading
philosopher will appeal to philosophers in all areas.
Jonathan Kvanvig presents a compelling new work in philosophical
theology on the universe, creation, and the afterlife. Organised
thematically by the endpoints of time, the volume begins by
addressing eschatological matters--the doctrines of heaven and
hell--and ends with an account of divine deliberation and creation.
Kvanvig develops a coherent theistic outlook which reconciles a
traditional, high conception of deity, with full providential
control over all aspects of creation, with full providential
control over all aspects of creation, with a conception of human
beings as free and morally responsible. The resulting position and
defense is labeled "Philosophical Arminianism," and deserves
attention in a broad range of religious traditions.
This book provides philosophical insight into the nature of reality
by reflecting on its ontological qualities through the medium of
film. The main question is whether we have access to reality
through film that is not based on visual representation or
narration: Is film-in spite of its immateriality-a way to directly
grasp and reproduce reality? Why do we perceive film as "real" at
all? What does it mean to define its own reproducibility as an
ontological feature of reality? And what does film as a medium
exactly show? The contributions in this book provide, from a
cinematic perspective, diverse philosophical analyses to the
understanding of the challenging concept of "the real of reality".
Over the last two decades the distinguished philosopher Philip
Kitcher has started to make a serious case for pragmatism as the
source of a new life in contemporary philosophy. There are some,
like Kitcher, who view today's analytic philosophy as mired in
narrowly focused, technical disputes of little interest to the
wider world. What is the future of philosophy, and what would it
look like? While Classical Pragmatism - the American philosophy
developed by John Dewey, Charles Peirce, and William James in the
19th century- has a mixed reputation today, Kitcher admires the way
its core ideas provide a way to prioritize avenues of inquiry. As
he points out, both James and Dewey shared a wish to eliminate
'insignificant questions' from philosophy, and both harbored
suspicion of 'timeless' philosophical problems handed down
generation after generation. Rather, they saw philosophy as
inherently embedded in its time, grappling with pressing issues in
religion, social life, art, politics, and education. Kitcher has
become increasingly moved by this reformist approach to philosophy,
and the published essays included here, alongside a detailed
introduction setting out Kitcher's views, provide motivation for
his view of the "reconstruction of philosophy." These essays try to
install the pragmatic spirit into contemporary philosophy, renewing
James and Dewey for our own times.
Philosopher Stephen Braude is particularly noted for two things:
his work in certain Borderland areas in which topics within
philosophy, psychology, parapsychology, and psychiatry meet,
overlap, and interact (or should interact), and the clarity and
pithiness of expression with which he handles abstruse and
difficult issues. Crimes of Reason brings together expanded and
updated versions of some of Braude's best previously published
essays, along with new essays written specifically for this book.
Although the essays deal with a variety of topics, they all hover
around a set of interrelated general themes. These are: the poverty
of mechanistic theories in the behavioral and life sciences, the
nature of psychological explanation and (at least within the halls
of the Academy) the unappreciated strategies required to understand
behavior, the nature of dissociation, and the nature and limits of
human abilities.Braude's targets include memory trace theory,
inner-cause theories of human behavior generally, Sheldrake's
theory of morphogenetic fields, widespread but simplistic views on
the nature of human abilities, multiple personality and moral
responsibility, the efficacy of prayer, and the shoddy tactics
often used to discredit research on dissociation and
parapsychology. Although the topics are often abstract and the
issues deep, their treatment in this book is accessible, and the
tone of the book is both light and occasionally combative.
From an Ontological Point of View is a highly original and accessible exploration of fundamental questions about what there is. John Heil discusses such issues as whether the world includes levels of reality; the nature of objects and properties; the demands of realism; what makes things true; qualities, powers, and the relation these bear to one another. He advances an account of the fundamental constituents of the world around us, and applies this account to problems that have plagued recent work in the philosophy of mind and metaphysics (colour, intentionality, and the nature of consciousness).
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