C.I. Lewis

Regular price €179.80
20th-century philosophy
a priori
American philosophy
analytic philosophy
Bertrand Russell
Book III
C.I. Lewis
Cartesian Skepticism
Categorial Frameworks
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Clarence Irving Lewis
conceptual pragmatism
epistemology
epistemology theory
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Good Life
Henri Wagner
Henry Sheffer
Hilary Putnam
implication
induction
Inductive Practices
James Conant
James O'Shea
James O’Shea
Jean-Philippe Narboux
Juliet Floyd
Kantian Solution
knowledge
Lewis's Account
Lewis's Answer
Lewis's Conception
Lewis's Conceptual Pragmatism
Lewis's Position
Lewis's Theory
Lewis's Treatment
Lewis’s Account
Lewis’s Answer
Lewis’s Conception
Lewis’s Conceptual Pragmatism
Lewis’s Position
Lewis’s Theory
Lewis’s Treatment
logic
Logical Space
logocentric predicament
material implication
Mind and the World-Order
modality
myth of the given
Nelson Goodman
Non-conceptual Content
Non-veridical Experiences
Phenomenal Reports
philosophy of mind
philosophy of science
pluralism
pragmatism
Primitive Proposition
Propositional Functions
Quantificational Instance
Quentin Kammer
Repeatable Qualia
Rudolf Carnap
Sanford Shieh
Sellars's Critique
Sellars's Views
Sellars’s Critique
Sellars’s Views
Strict Implication
strict implication analysis
Susan Haack
Thomas Baldwin
Thomas Land
Timur Ucan
Transcendental Deduction
twentieth century philosophers
Wilfrid Sellars
Willard Van Orman Quine

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138700871
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 04 May 2021
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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This edited collection explores the philosophy of Clarence Irving Lewis through two major concepts that are integral to his conceptual pragmatism: the a priori and the given. The relation between these two elements of knowledge forms the core of Lewis’s masterpiece Mind and the World Order . While Lewis’s conceptual pragmatism is directed against any conception of the a priori as constraining the mind and experience, it also emphasizes the inalterability and the unavoidability of the given that remains the same through any interpretation of it by the mind. The chapters in this book probe Lewis’s new account of the relation between the a priori and the given in dialogue with other notable figures in twentieth-century philosophy, including Goodman, Putnam, Quine, Russell, Sellars, and Sheffer. C.I. Lewis: The A Priori and the Given represents a focused treatment of a longneglected figure in twentieth-century American philosophy.

Quentin Kammer is Lecturer at Bordeaux Montaigne University, France, and member of the research center “Sciences, Philosophie, Humanites.” Defended in 2018, his PhD dissertation focuses on Nelson Goodman’s conception of the rightness of projection. He, along with Henri Wagner, translated in French, Lewis’s “A Pragmatic Conception of the A Priori ” and Goodman’s “Snowflakes and Wastebaskets” devoted to Lewis’s pragmatism.

Jean-Philippe Narboux is currently Associate Professor of Philosophy at Bordeaux Montaigne University, France. His recent articles include “Is Self-Consciousness Consciousness of One‘s Self?,” in Wittgenstein and Phenomenology (Routledge, 2018), “Anscombe’s Account of Voluntary Action in Intention ” ( Enrahonar , 2020), and “Conceptual Truth, Necessity, and Negation” ( The Monist , 2020).

Henri Wagner is Lecturer at Bordeaux Montaigne University, France. He mainly works on philosophy of logic and language. He is the editor of Hilary Putnam (Klēsis , no. 47, 2020) and has recently published “The Significance of the Division of Linguistic Labor” ( The Monist , volume 103, Issue 4, October 2020, 381–390).