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Eva Picardi has been one of the most influential Italian analytic
philosophers of her generation. She taught for forty years at the
University of Bologna, raising three generations of students. This
collection of selected writings honors her work, confirming
Picardi's status as one of the most important Frege scholars of her
generation and a leading authority on the philosophy of Donald
Davidson. Bringing together Picardi's contributions to the history
of analytic philosophy, it includes her papers on major
20th-century figures such as Wittgenstein, Quine, Davidson, Rorty,
and Brandom. She examines their work in comparison with the
philosopher Michael Dummett's, illuminating contrasts between
American Neo-pragmatism and Continental philosophy. By considering
key contributions made by Gadamer and Adorno and contrasting them
with Davidson and Rorty's proposals, Picardi is able to bridge the
Analytic and Continental divide. Featuring an introduction by
Annalisa Coliva and new translations of previously unpublished
papers, this collection emphasizes the significance of Picardi's
work for a new generation of readers.
Eva Picardi (1948-2017) was one of the most influential Italian
analytic philosophers of her generation. She taught for forty years
at the University of Bologna, raising three generations of
students. This volume presents a selection of Picardi's essays on
Frege's philosophy of logic, language, and psychology. Together,
these papers provide a close look at the milieu within which Frege
operated, and serve to highlight the relevance of his work for
contemporary debates, particularly in the philosophy of language.
One strand in Picardi's work on Frege concerns understanding and
contextualizing Frege's anti-psychologism. Picardi contends that
Frege was motivated by semantic considerations, much more so than
by adherence to Kantian transcendentalism. Furthermore, Picardi
draws on her deep knowledge of German, and the fact that she was a
native speaker of Italian, to reconstruct the intricacies of
Frege's relationship with other logicians of his time-both in
Germany, like Kerry and Sigwart, and in Italy, like Peano and his
school. Picardi's work shows how the historical and the theoretical
(typically treated as separate in contemporary analytic philosophy,
even in competition), complement and enrich one another.
Eva Picardi has been one of the most influential Italian analytic
philosophers of her generation. She taught for forty years at the
University of Bologna, raising three generations of students. This
collection of selected writings honors her work, confirming
Picardi's status as one of the most important Frege scholars of her
generation and a leading authority on the philosophy of Donald
Davidson. Bringing together Picardi's contributions to the history
of analytic philosophy, it includes her papers on major
20th-century figures such as Wittgenstein, Quine, Davidson, Rorty,
and Brandom. She examines their work in comparison with the
philosopher Michael Dummett's, illuminating contrasts between
American Neo-pragmatism and Continental philosophy. By considering
key contributions made by Gadamer and Adorno and contrasting them
with Davidson and Rorty's proposals, Picardi is able to bridge the
Analytic and Continental divide. Featuring an introduction by
Annalisa Coliva and new translations of previously unpublished
papers, this collection emphasizes the significance of Picardi's
work for a new generation of readers.
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