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Books > Philosophy > Topics in philosophy > Metaphysics & ontology
Containing three previously unpublished papers by W.V. Quine as
well as historical, exegetical, and critical papers by several
leading Quine scholars including Hylton, Ebbs, and Ben-Menahem,
this volume aims to remedy the comparative lack of historical
investigation of Quine and his philosophical context.
The phenomenologists were concerned to show that essential
structures of being, knowable by rational insight, are found far
more abundantly than is commonly thought. In his great monograph
Reinach shows that in the civil law, where one usually thinks that
there are only legal structures of human devising, there are in
fact many essential structures, such as the structure of promising
or of owning. These pre-positive structures, which are something
different from the moral norms relevant to the positive law,
provide the civil law with a foundation that can be known by
philosophical insight. Though the enactments of the civil law are
changeable, these essential foundations are not changeable. Of
particular significance and originality is Reinach's concept of a
social act, that is, of an act that addresses another and has to be
heard by the other in order to be complete. Reinach shows that the
essence of legally relevant acts such as promising, comes to
evidence when they are understood as social acts. The concept of a
social act, in fact, has significance far beyond the part of legal
philosophy in which Reinach first discovers it.
This book is a collection of articles authored by renowed Polish
ontologists living and working in the early part of the 21st
century. Harking back to the well-known Polish Lvov-Warsaw School,
founded by Kazimierz Twardowski, we try to make our ontological
considerations as systematically rigorous and clear as possible -
i.e. to the greatest extent feasible, but also no more than the
subject under consideration itself allows for. Hence, the papers
presented here do not seek to steer clear of methods of inquiry
typical of either the formal or the natural sciences: on the
contrary, they use such methods wherever possible. At the same
time, despite their adherence to rigorous methods, the Polish
ontologists included here do not avoid traditional ontological
issues, being inspired as they most certainly are by the great
masters of Western philosophy - from Plato and Aristotle, through
St. Thomas and Leibniz, to Husserl, to name arguably just the most
important.
When Reschers Process Metaphysics (1996) was published, it was
widely acclaimed as a major step towards the academic recognition
of a mode of thought that has otherwise been confined within sharp
scholarly boundaries. Of course it is not an easy book: despite its
stylistic clarity, it remains the complex outcome of a lifes work
in most areas of philosophy. The goal of the present volume is to
systematically unfold the vices and virtues of Process Metaphysics,
and thereby to specify the contemporary state of affairs in process
thought. To do so, the editor has gathered one focused contribution
per chapter, each paper addressing specifically and explicitly its
assigned chapter and seeking to promote a dialogue with Rescher. In
addition, the volume features Reschers replies to the papers.
Michail Peramatzis presents a new interpretation of Aristotle's
view of the priority relations between fundamental and derivative
parts of reality, following the recent revival of interest in
Aristotelian discussions of what priority consists in and how it
relates existents. He explores how in Aristotle's view, in
contradistinction with (e.g.) Quinean metaphysical views, questions
of existence are not considered central. Rather, the crucial
questions are: what types of existent are fundamental and what
their grounding relation to derivative existents consists in. It is
extremely important, therefore, to return to Aristotle's own theses
regarding priority and to study them not only with exegetical
caution but also with an acutely critical philosophical eye.
Aristotle deploys the notion of priority in numerous levels of his
thought. In his ontology he operates with the notion of primary
substance. His Categories, for instance, confer this honorific
title upon particular objects such as Socrates or Bucephalus, while
in the Metaphysics it is essences or substantial forms, such as
being human, which are privileged with priority over certain types
of matter or hylomorphic compounds (either particular compound
objects such as Socrates or universal compound types such as the
species human). Peramatzis' chief aim is to understand priority
claims of this sort in Aristotle's metaphysical system by setting
out the different concepts of priority and seeing whether and, if
so, how Aristotle's preferred prior and posterior items fit with
these concepts.
To rectify the unfortunate neglect in the West of one of India's
premier intellectuals, philosopher Innaiah Narisetti has compiled
this new collection of Roy's most significant works. Roy conceived
of humanism as a scientific, integral, and radically new worldview.
For humanists, philosophers, political scientists, and others, M N
Roy's unique and still very relevant view of humanism will have
great appeal and broad application beyond its original Indian
context.
The first book in English to offer an extended comparative analysis
of Heidegger and Deleuze. Those familiar with Heidegger's and
Deleuze's thinking will find a detailed, well-researched book that
comes to an innovative conclusion, while those new to both will
find a clear, well-written exposition of their key concepts.
This book articulates the theoretical outlines of a feminism
developed from Aristotle's metaphysics, making a new contribution
to feminist theory. Readers will discover why Aristotle was not a
feminist and how he might have become one, through an investigation
of Aristotle and Aristotelian tradition. The author shows how
Aristotle's metaphysics can be used to articulate a particularly
subtle and theoretically powerful understanding of gender that may
offer a highly useful tool for distinctively feminist arguments.
This work builds on Martha Nussbaum's 'capabilities approach' in a
more explicitly and thoroughly hylomorphist way. The author shows
how Aristotle's hylomorphic model, developed to run between the
extremes of Platonic dualism and Democritean atomism, can similarly
be used today to articulate a view of gender that takes bodily
differences seriously without reducing gender to biological
determinations. Although written for theorists, this scholarly yet
accessible book can be used to address more practical issues and
the final chapter explores women in universities as one example.
This book will appeal to both feminists with limited familiarity
with Aristotle's philosophy, and scholars of Aristotle with limited
familiarity with feminism.
The book discusses contemporary metaphysics of science and deals
with the central question which ontology fits best with our
knowledge of the world. Two competing positions in today's
metaphysics of science are analysed: Humeanism and
dispositionalism. There are physical and metaphysical arguments to
show that orthodox Humeanism is in trouble. The unorthodox
metaphysical turn consists in taking the fundamental properties to
be relations rather than intrinsic properties. The book spells out
in detail what an unorthodox version of Humeanism amounts to and
shows that in turning unorthodox Humeanism offers a competitive
metaphysical framework for science without commitment to
irreducible causation.
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In Physical Realization, Sydney Shoemaker considers the question of
how physicalism can be true: how can all facts about the world,
including mental ones, be constituted by facts about the
distribution in the world of physical properties? Physicalism
requires that the mental properties of a person are 'realized in'
the physical properties of that person, and that all instantiations
of properties in macroscopic objects are realized in microphysical
states of affairs. Shoemaker offers an account of both these sorts
of realization, one which allows the realized properties to be
causally efficacious. He also explores the implications of this
account for a wide range of metaphysical issues, including the
nature of persistence through time, the problem of material
constitution, the possibility of emergent properties, and the
nature of phenomenal consciousness.
Beneath metaphysical problems there often lies a conflict between
what we want to be true and what we believe to be true. Nathan
provides a general account of the resolution of this conflict as a
philosophical objective, showing that there are ways of thinking it
through systematically with a view to resolving or alleviating it.
The author also studies in detail a set of interrelated conflicts
about the freedom and the reality of the will. He shows how
difficult it is to find a freedom either of decision or of action
which is both an object of reflective desire and an object of
rational belief. He also examines conflicts about volition as such,
contending that the veridicality of volitional experience is no
less easy to doubt than the veridicality of our experience of
colors. In this context, arguments emerge for a voluntarist theory
of the self. Nathan's important book will be essential reading for
all philosophers interested in free will, volition, the self, and
the methodology of metaphysics.
Almost everyone can run. Only very few can run a marathon. But what
is it for agents to be able to do things? This question, while
central to many debates in philosophy, is still awaiting a
comprehensive answer. The book provides just that. Drawing on some
valuable insights from previous works of abilities and making use
of possible world semantics, Jaster develops the "success view", a
view on which abilities are a matter of successful behavior. Along
the way, she explores the gradable nature of abilities, the
contextsensitivity of ability statements, the difference between
general and specific abilities, the relationship between abilities
and dispositions, and the ability to act otherwise. The book is
mandatory reading for anyone working on abilities, and provides
valuable insights for anyone dealing with agents' abilities in
other fields of philosophy. For this book, Romy Jaster has received
both the Wolfgang Stegmuller Prize and the De Gruyter Prize for
Analytical Philosophy of Mind or Metaphysics/Ontology.
Value, Reality, and Desire is an extended argument for a robust
realism about value. The robust realist affirms the following
distinctive theses. There are genuine claims about value which are
true or false - there are facts about value. These value-facts are
mind-independent - they are not reducible to desires or other
mental states, or indeed to any non-mental facts of a
non-evaluative kind. And these genuine, mind-independent,
irreducible value-facts are causally efficacious. Values, quite
literally, affect us. These are not particularly fashionable
theses, and taken as a whole they go somewhat against the grain of
quite a lot of recent work in the metaphysics of value. Further,
against the received view, Oddie argues that we can have knowledge
of values by experiential acquaintance, that there are experiences
of value which can be both veridical and appropriately responsive
to the values themselves. Finally, these value-experiences are not
the products of some exotic and implausible faculty of 'intuition'.
Rather, they are perfectly mundane and familiar mental states -
namely, desires. This view explains how values can be
'intrinsically motivating', without falling foul of the widely
accepted 'queerness' objection. There are, of course, other
objections to each of the realist's claims. In showing how and why
these objections fail, Oddie introduces a wealth of interesting and
original insights about issues of wider interest - including the
nature of properties, reduction, supervenience, and causation. The
result is a novel and interesting account which illuminates what
would otherwise be deeply puzzling features of value and desire and
the connections between them.
The earlier part of the commentary by 'Philoponus' on Aristotle's
On the Soul is translated by William Charlton in another volume in
the series. This volume includes the latter part of the commentary
along with a translation of Stephanus' commentary on Aristotle 's
On Interpretation. It thus enables readers to assess for themselves
Charlton's view that the commentary once ascribed to Philoponus
should in fact be ascribed to Stephanus. The two treatises of
Aristotle here commented on are very different from each other. In
On Interpretation Aristotle studies the logic of opposed pairs of
statements. It is in this context that Aristotle discusses the
nature of language and the implications for determinism of opposed
predictions about a future occurrence, such as a sea-battle. And
Stephanus, like his predecessor Ammonius, brings in other
deterministic arguments not considered by Aristotle ('The Reaper'
and the argument from God's foreknowledge). In On the Soul 3.9-13,
Aristotle introduces a theory of action and motivation and sums up
the role of perception in animal life. Despite the differences in
subject matter between the two texts, Charlton is able to make a
good case for Stephanus' authorship of both commentaries. He also
sees Stephanus as preserving what was valuable from Ammonius'
earlier commentary On Interpretation, while bringing to bear the
virtue of greater concision. At the same time, Stephanus reveals
his Christian affiliations, in contrast to Ammonius, his pagan
predecessor.
Phil Hutchinson engages with philosophers of emotion in both the
analytic and continental traditions. He advances a framework for
understanding emotion - world-taking cognitivism and argues that
reductionist accounts of emotion leave us in a state of poverty
regarding our understanding of the world and ourselves.
The Meditations of Roman Emperor Marcus Aurelius are a readable
exposition of the system of metaphysics known as stoicism. Stoics
maintained that by putting aside great passions, unjust thoughts
and indulgence, man could acquire virtue and live at one with
nature.
In "On the Soul" 3.1-5, Aristotle goes beyond the five senses to
the general functions of sense perception, the imagination and the
so-called active intellect, whose identity was still a matter of
controversy in the time of Thomas Aquinas. In his commentary on
Aristotle's text, Simplicius insists that the intellect in question
is not something transcendental, but the human rational soul. He
denies both Plotinus' view that a part of our soul has never
descended from uninterrupted contemplation of the Platonic forms,
and Proclus' view that our soul cannot be changed in its substance
through embodiment. Continuing the debate in Carlos Steel's earlier
volume in this series, Henry Blumenthal assesses the authorship of
the commentary. He concludes against it being by Simplicius, but
not for its being by Priscian. In a novel interpretation, he
suggests that if Priscian had any hand in it at all, it might have
been as editor of notes from Simplicius' lectures.
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