C.I. Lewis : the a priori and the given
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C.I. Lewis : the a priori and the given
(Routledge studies in American philosophy)
Routledge, 2021
- : hbk
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Note
Includes bibliographical references and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
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.
Table of Contents
Introduction 1
HENRI WAGNER
1 Sheffer, Lewis, and the "Logocentric Predicament" 27
JULIET FLOYD
2 Strict Implication and the Pragmatic A Priori 104
SANFORD SHIEH
3 Aims and Claims of C. I. Lewis's Conceptual Pragmatism 132
HENRI WAGNER
4 C. I. Lewis on the Intersubjective and the Constitution of Objectivity 167
ARATA HAMAWAKI
5 Relocating the Myth of the Given in Lewis and Sellars 195
JAMES O'SHEA
6 Spontaneity, Sensation, and the Myth of the Given 216
THOMAS LAND
7 Goodman and the Given: What Goodman Inherits From C. I. Lewis 240
QUENTIN KAMMER
8 C. I. Lewis: The Red and the Good 274
THOMAS BALDWIN
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