Collected Essays 1929 - 1968

Regular price €61.50
A01=Gilbert Ryle
advanced philosophical argumentation
analytic
analytic philosophy
Analytic Proposition
argument
aristotelian
Author_Gilbert Ryle
Category=QDHR
Cheshire Cat
Concrete Inferences
Descriptive Phrase
Disengaged
Disjunctive Set
En Passant
epistemology concepts
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eq_nobargain
Follow
Hide And Seek
Holding
Hypothetical Proposition
Inclined
Kindred
Le Penseur
logical positivism
Mr Pickwick
Odd
ontological
ordinary language analysis
penseur
philosophy of language
philosophy of mind
pickwick
Prime Number
proceedings
Revue Internationale De Philosophie
round
Singular Proposition
society
Sotto Voce
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Vice Versa
Waterloo
Wo

Product details

  • ISBN 9780415485494
  • Weight: 1220g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 15 Jun 2009
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Gilbert Ryle was one of the most important and yet misunderstood philosophers of the Twentieth Century. Long unavailable, Collected Essays 1929-1968: Collected Papers Volume 2 stands as testament to the astonishing breadth of Ryle’s philosophical concerns.

This volume showcases Ryle’s deep interest in the notion of thinking and contains many of his major pieces, including his classic essays ‘Knowing How and Knowing That’, ‘Philosophical Arguments’, ‘Systematically Misleading Expressions’, and ‘A Puzzling Element in the Notion of Thinking’. He ranges over an astonishing number of topics, including feelings, pleasure, sensation, forgetting and concepts and in so doing hones his own philosophical stance, steering a careful path between behaviourism and Cartesianism.

Together with the Collected Papers Volume 1 and the new edition of The Concept of Mind, these outstanding essays represent the very best of Ryle’s work. Each volume contains a substantial preface by Julia Tanney, and both are essential reading for any student of twentieth-century philosophies of mind and language.

Gilbert Ryle (1900 -1976) was Waynflete Professor of Metaphysics and Fellow of Magdalen College Oxford, an editor of Mind, and a president of the Aristotelian Society.

Julia Tanney is Senior Lectuer at the University of Kent, and has held visiting positions at the University of Picardie and Paris-Sorbonne.

Gilbert Ryle was born in England in 1900, one of ten children. In 1924 he was appointed to a lectureship at Christ Church College, Oxford where he was to remain for his entire academic career until his retirement in 1968. In 1945 he was elected to the Waynflete Chair of Metaphysical Philosophy. He was editor of the journal Mind from 1947 to 1971. A confirmed bachelor, he lived after his retirement with his twin sister Mary in the Oxfordshire village of Islip. Gardening and walking gave him immense pleasure, as did his pipe. He died on 6 October 1976 at Whitby in Yorkshire after a day's walking on the moors.