W. V. Quine created a new way of looking at the eternal
questions of philosophy and their interconnections. His
investigations into semantics and epistemology, ontology and
causality, natural kinds, time, space, and individuation
transformed the philosophical landscape for generations to come. In
the twenty years between his last collection of essays and his
death in 2000, Quine continued his work, producing a number of
impressive essays in which he deepened, elaborated, and
occasionally modified his position on central philosophical issues.
The last of these essays, which gives this collection its name,
appeared in 2002.
This volume collects the main essays from this last, productive
period of Quine s prodigious career. It also includes some notable
earlier essays that were not included in the previous collections
although they contain illuminating discussions and are quite often
referred to by other philosophers and also by Quine himself in his
later writings. These essays, along with several manuscripts
published here for the first time, offer a more complete and highly
defined picture than ever before of one of the twentieth century s
greatest thinkers working at the height of his powers.
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