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With a wealth of anecdote Dorothy Emmet looks back on the
philosophers who made a personal impact on her. She brings to life
the Oxford of the 1920s, and writes particularly about H.A.
Pritchard and R.G. Collingwood. She knew A.N. Whitehead and Samuel
Alexander, and remembers philosophers who struggled with political
dilemmas when a number of intellectuals were turning to Marxism.
Describing the post-war period she recalls R.B. Braithwaite,
Michael Polanyi, Alasdair MacIntyre and others. Her personal
portraits will interest a wide readership, as well as making
essential reading for professional philosophers.
With a wealth of anecdote Dorothy Emmet looks back on the
philosophers who made a personal impact on her. She brings to life
the Oxford of the 1920s, and writes particularly about H.A.
Pritchard and R.G. Collingwood. She knew A.N. Whitehead and Samuel
Alexander, and remembers philosophers who struggled with political
dilemmas when a number of intellectuals were turning to Marxism.
Describing the post-war period she recalls R.B. Braithwaite,
Michael Polanyi, Alasdair MacIntyre and others. Her personal
portraits will interest a wide readership, as well as making
essential reading for professional philosophers.
The concept of process is often used but seldom discussed. In this
book the author looks at how a process differs from a series of
events, facts or even just things changing. She claims causation is
best seen in terms of processes and subsequently examines various
aspects of this subject.
The Effectiveness of Causes presents a strong view of causation
seen as an operation between participants in events, and not as a
relation holding between events themselves. In it, Emmet proposes
that other philosophical views of cause and effect provide only a
world of events, each of which is presented as an unchanging unit.
Such a world, she contends, is a Zeno universe, since transitions
and movement are lost. Emmet offers a more complex interpretation
of the various forms of causal dependence. She sees immanent
causation in the mere persistence of things, where effects are not
temporarily separable from causes, and she considers the operation
of efficacious grace. This is a new approach to the traditional
problem and provides stimulating implications for the other
metaphysical questions and for the philosophy of science."
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