Wittgenstein's Whewell's Court Lectures : Cambridge, 1938-1941, from the Notes by Yorick Smythies.
Clasificación: | Libro Electrónico |
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Formato: | Electrónico eBook |
Idioma: | Inglés |
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Somerset :
John Wiley & Sons, Incorporated,
2017.
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Acceso en línea: | Texto completo |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- Title Page; Table of Contents; Preface; Editorial Introduction; List of Editorial Conventions; Abbreviations; WHEWELL'S COURT LECTURES, CAMBRIDGE 1938-1941; 1 Lectures on Knowledge; Lecture 1; Lecture 2; Lecture 3; Lecture 4; Lecture 5; Lecture 6; Lecture 7; Lecture 8; Lecture 9; Lecture 10; Lecture 11; 2 Lectures on Necessary Propositions and Other Topics; Lectures on Gödel; III; IV; Puzzle of Trinity College; Necessary Propositions; 'Absolutely Determinate'23 April 1938; Continuous Band of Colours; Are There an Infinite Number of Shades of Colour?; 'All There': Logical Necessity.
- Achilles and the TortoiseInfinitesimal Calculus and Free Will; 3 Lectures on Similarity; Lecture 1; Lecture 2; Lecture 3; Lecture 4; Lecture 8; Lecture 9; Lecture 10; Lecture 11; Lecture 12; Lecture 13; Lecture 14; Lecture 15; Lecture 16; 4 Lectures on Description; Lecture 1; Lecture 2; Lecture 3; Lecture 4; Lecture 5; Lecture 6; Lecture 7; Lecture 8; Lecture 9; Lecture 10; 5 Wittgenstein's Reply to a Paper by Y. Smythies on 'Understanding'; Y. Smythies: Mental Processes.; 6 Lectures on Belief; I. States of Mind (Belief; Feelings; etc.); II. Categories and Objects; 7 Lectures on Volition.
- Lecture 1Lecture 2; Lecture 3; Lecture 4; Lecture 5; Lecture 6; Lecture 7; Lecture 8; 8 Lectures on Freedom of the Will; Lecture 1; Lecture 2; Appendix; 9 Y. Smythies' 1940 Paper on 'Understanding'; 10 Preparatory Notes for Y. Smythies' 1945 Paper on 'Meaning'; 2nd Lecture; 11 The King of the Dark Chamber, by Rabindranath Tagore, translated from the English of Rabindranath Tagore into the English used by L. Wittgenstein and Yorick Smythies, by L. Wittgenstein and Yorick Smythies; 12 Comments Prompted by the Notes Taken From Wittgenstein's Lectures on Volition and on Freewill, by Y. Smythies.
- (1) 'Following' Wittgenstein(2) Thinking exhibited as raw material; (3) Problems which are prevented from introducing themselves; (4) Trivial character of the language-games used as illustrations; (5) Avoidance of examples of untrivial utterances; (6) Not saying anything which anyone could deny; (7) Practices relating to 'choice' versus 'choice itself'; (8) Do Wittgenstein's maps help you to find your way about in life itself?; (9) Does the inclination to say both 'I am responsible' and 'I am not responsible' allow itself to become treated as matter for psychological explanations?
- (10) Regulation(11) Are any of the differentiating features, marking out differing forms of language-games, essential to the existence of language-games?; (12) 'Greatness'; Bibliography; Index; End User License Agreement.