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The volume honours Eva Picardi - her philosophical views and
interests, as well as her teaching - collecting eighteen essays,
some by former students of hers, some by colleagues with whom she
discussed and interacted. The themes of the volume encompass topics
ranging from foundational and historical issues in the philosophy
of language and the philosophy of logic and mathematics, as well as
issues related to the recent debates on rationality, naturalism and
the contextual aspects of meaning. The volume is split into three
sections: one on Gottlob Frege's work - in philosophy of language
and logic -, taking into account also its historical dimension; one
on Donald's Davidson's work; and one on the
contextualism-literalism dispute about meaning and on naturalist
research programmes such as Chomsky's.
Keith Donnellan of UCLA is one of the founding fathers of
contemporary philosophy of language, along with David Kaplan and
Saul Kripke. Donnellan was and is an extremely creative thinker
whose insights reached into metaphysics, action theory, the history
of philosophy, and of course the philosophy of mind and language.
This volume collects the best critical essays on Donnellan's
forty-year body of work. The pieces by such noted philosophers as
Tyler Burge, David Kaplan, and John Perry, discuss Donnellan's
various insights particularly offering new readings of his views on
language and mind.
David Kaplan's intellectual influence on 20th century analytic
philosophy has been transformative. He introduced lasting
innovations in the philosophy of language and philosophical logic.
Just as important, however, is Kaplan's way of doing philosophy;
generous but incisive, his profoundly interactive style mentored
countless generations of students, many of whom contribute to this
volume.
This volume collects new, previously unpublished articles on
Kaplan, analyzing a broad spectrum of topics ranging from cutting
edge linguistics and the philosophy of mathematics, to metaphysics,
the foundations of pragmatics, and the theory of communication.
With its historical introduction and personal tributes, The
Philosophy of David Kaplan also reveals much of Kaplan's life and
times, highlighting the key players of analytic philosophy of the
last century, and underscoring Kaplan's substantial impact on
contemporary philosophy.
We consider the problem of minimizing the relative perimeter under
a volume constraint in an unbounded convex body C ? Rn, without
assuming any further regularity on the boundary of C. Motivated by
an example of an unbounded convex body with null isoperimetric
profile, we introduce the concept of unbounded convex body with
uniform geometry. We then provide a handy characterization of the
uniform geometry property and, by exploiting the notion of
asymptotic cylinder of C, we prove existence of isoperimetric
regions in a generalized sense. By an approximation argument we
show the strict concavity of the isoperimetric profile and,
consequently, the connectedness of generalized isoperimetric
regions. We also focus on the cases of small as well as of large
volumes; in particular we show existence of isoperimetric regions
with sufficiently large volumes, for special classes of unbounded
convex bodies. We finally address some questions about
isoperimetric rigidity and analyze the asymptotic behavior of the
isoperimetric profile in connection with the notion of
isoperimetric dimension.
Quine is one of the most influential of contemporary philosophers,
whose work has ranged broadly across a great number of topics and
issues in a career spanning some fifty years. In this collection a
group of distinguished philosophers offer a sustained critical
evaluation of the full range of Quine's writings. Amongst the
topics addressed are interpretation, epistemology, ontology,
modality, and mathematical truth. This collection will certainly
influence all future discussion of Quine. The contributors include:
George Boolos, H-N. Castaneda, Donald Davidson, Umberto Eco,
Dagfinn Follesdal, James Higginbotham, Charles Parsons, Hilary
Putnam, Barry Stroud, and Bas van Fraassen. However, Quine is given
the last word, responding to the essays in the final contribution.
The volume honours Eva Picardi - her philosophical views and
interests, as well as her teaching - collecting eighteen essays,
some by former students of hers, some by colleagues with whom she
discussed and interacted. The themes of the volume encompass topics
ranging from foundational and historical issues in the philosophy
of language and the philosophy of logic and mathematics, as well as
issues related to the recent debates on rationality, naturalism and
the contextual aspects of meaning. The volume is split into three
sections: one on Gottlob Frege's work - in philosophy of language
and logic -, taking into account also its historical dimension; one
on Donald's Davidson's work; and one on the
contextualism-literalism dispute about meaning and on naturalist
research programmes such as Chomsky's.
Keith Donnellan, Emeritus of UCLA, is one of the major figures in
20th century philosophy of language, a key part of the highly
influential generation of scholars that included Hilary Putnam,
Saul Kripke, and David Kaplan. Like many of these philosophers, his
primary contributions were published in article form rather than
books. This volume presents a highly focussed collection of
articles by Donnellan. In the late sixties and early seventies, the
philosophy of language and mind went through a paradigm shift, with
the then-dominant Fregean theory losing ground to the "direct
reference" theory sometimes referred to as the direct reference
revolution. Donnellan played a key role in this shift, focusing on
the relation of semantic reference, a touchstone in the philosophy
of language and the relation of "thinking about" - a touchstone in
the philosophy of mind. The debates around the direct reference
theory ended up forming the agenda of the philosophy of language
and related fields for decades to come, and Donnellan's
contributions were always considered essential. His ideas spawned a
scholarly debate that continues to the present day. This volume
collects his key contributions datng from the late 1960's through
the early 1980's, along with a substantive introduction by the
editor Joseph Almog, which disseminates the work to a new audience
and for posterity.
Quine is one of the most influential of contemporary philosophers,
whose work has ranged broadly across a great number of topics and
issues in a career spanning some fifty years. In this collection a
group of distinguished philosophers offer a sustained critical
evaluation of the full range of Quine's writings. Amongst the
topics addressed are interpretation, epistemology, ontology,
modality, and mathematical truth. This collection will certainly
influence all future discussion of Quine. The contributors include:
George Boolos, H-N. Castaneda, Donald Davidson, Umberto Eco,
Dagfinn Follesdal, James Higginbotham, Charles Parsons, Hilary
Putnam, Barry Stroud, and Bas van Fraassen. However, Quine is given
the last word, responding to the essays in the final contribution.
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