The metaphysics of G.E. Moore

Bibliographic Information

The metaphysics of G.E. Moore

David O'Connor

(Philosophical studies series in philosophy / editors, Wilfrid Sellars, Keith Lehrer, v. 25)

D. Reidel, c1982 , Sold and distributed in the U.S.A. and Canada by Kluwer Boston, c1982

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Note

Bibliography: p. 169-173

Includes indexes

Description and Table of Contents

Description

In this book, setting aside his consideration of specifically ethical topics, I try to provide a comprehensive interpretation of Moore's thought. Against the background of this general interpretation I examine in detail his work on some of the central problems of metaphysics and, because Moore's being able to sustain a consistent anti-skepticism is essential to the survival of the base from which he works on those problems, of epistemology too. The interpretation of which I speak involves my taking as the centerpiece of Moore's philosophical work his book, Some Main Problems of Philosophy, written in 1910 as the text of a lecture series but left unpublished for over forty years thereafter. That book is aptly titled, for the issues with which Moore deals in it are indeed among the main problems of philosophy. Not least of these are the problems of formulating a general categorial deSCription of the world and then of defending that formulation. However, while I will discuss Moore's work in light of its contribution to this project of taking metaphysical inventory, it is important to note that he, in common with many other major figures in contemporary analytical philosophy, did not approach specific philosophical puzzles with a view to possibly integrating solutions to them into a comprehensive theory about reality as a whole, that is, into what might be called a metaphysical system.

Table of Contents

I: Introduction: Moore and Metaphysics.- 1. Commonsense Realism.- 2. A Look Ahead.- 3. Realisms.- II: Arguments Against Idealism.- 1. That British Empiricism is Psychologists: The Background to Moore's Break from Idealism.- 2. Moore's Attack upon the Esse estPercipi Principle: First Stage (1899-1903).- 3. Moore's Attack upon the Esse est Percipi principle: Second Stage (after 1910).- 4. The Theory of Internal Relations.- III: Common Sense in Metaphysics.- 1. Moore's Meaning/Analysis Distinction as Making a Role for Common Sense in Philosophy.- 2. Moore's Metaphysical Categories.- 3. Moore's Proof of an External World.- IV: Moore's Conception of Analysis.- 1. Ordinary Language, Common Sense and Analysis.- 2. What is Analysed and How?.- 3. The Criteria of Correct Analysis.- V: Sense-Data and Things in the Material World.- 1. Direct Realism, Phenomenalism and Representationalism.- 2. On the Relation of Sense-Datum Propositions to Material-Object Propositions.- VI: The Status of Abstract Entities (I).- 1. Concepts as Ultimate Subjects.- 2. For and Against Propositions and Concepts after 1910.- VII: The Status of Abstract Entities (II).- 1. Two Types of Universals: Relations and Relational Properties.- 2. 'The Third Kind of Universal'.- 3. Classes.- VIII: Review and Moore's Dualisms.- Index of Proper Names.- Index of Subjects.

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  • Philosophical studies series in philosophy

    editors, Wilfrid Sellars, Keith Lehrer

    D. Reidel , Sold and distributed in the U.S.A. and Canada by Kluwer Academic Publishers , Sold and distributed in the U.S.A. and Canada by Kluwer Boston

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