In this collection of recent and unpublished essays, leading
analytic philosopher Scott Soames traces milestones in his field
from its beginnings in Britain and Germany in the late nineteenth
and early twentieth century, through its subsequent growth in the
United States, up to its present as the world's most vigorous
philosophical tradition. The central essay chronicles how analytic
philosophy developed in the United States out of American
pragmatism, the impact of European visitors and immigrants, the
midcentury transformation of the Harvard philosophy department, and
the rapid spread of the analytic approach that followed. Another
essay explains the methodology guiding analytic philosophy, from
the logicism of Frege and Russell through Wittgenstein's linguistic
turn and Carnap's vision of replacing metaphysics with philosophy
of science. Further essays review advances in logic and the
philosophy of mathematics that laid the foundation for a rigorous,
scientific study of language, meaning, and information. Other
essays discuss W.V.O. Quine, David K. Lewis, Saul Kripke, the
Frege-Russell analysis of quantification, Russell's attempt to
eliminate sets with his "no class theory," and the Quine-Carnap
dispute over meaning and ontology. The collection then turns to
topics at the frontier of philosophy of language. The final essays,
combining philosophy of language and law, advance a sophisticated
originalist theory of interpretation and apply it to U.S.
constitutional rulings about due process.
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