
The Papers In This Collection Address The Question To What Extent The Doctrine Of Linguistic Idealism Is Coherent And Plausible. This Position Holds That The Existence And The Structure Of The World Are In Some Sense Dependent On The Existence And The Structure Of Language. The Interest Of The Thesis Is That, Since Human Language Is An Evolved, Empirical Phenomenon, It Would Be Surprising And Significant If The World, Which Existed Long Before Human Beings Came Into Being And Is In Many Respects Quite Obviously Independent Of Them, Were Somehow Beholden To The Fact That Human Beings Can Talk About It. That, Nevertheless, Is The Claim. Some Of The Papers In This Collection Are Favourable To This Position In One Version Or Another; Others Attack It. Some Of The Papers Approach The Topic Historically, Particularly Via The Writings Of Kant And Wittgenstein; Others Adopt An Exclusively Systematic Approach. All The Authors Are Philosophers And Address Their Chosen Aspect Of The General Topic In (broadly Speaking) Metaphysical Terms, But The Bearing Of Modern Linguistic Theory On The Thesis Of Linguistic Idealism, As Well As Its Connections With Mathematical Results And Practice, Also Play A Role In Some Of The Contributions. The Collection Is Prefaced By An Introduction Which Presents A General Argument For Linguistic Idealism And Examines The Way In Which That Position Figures In The Writings Of Wittgenstein And Anscombe.
This collection investigates whether the doctrine of linguistic idealism—the claim that the world's existence and structure depend on language—is a coherent and plausible philosophical position. Richard Gaskin, a professor of philosophy, compiles a series of essays that examine this provocative thesis from both historical and systematic perspectives. The contributors analyze how a phenomenon as empirical and evolved as human language could theoretically dictate the nature of a world that predates human existence.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Experts and scholars in the field of analytic philosophy recognize this collection as a rigorous examination of the intersection between metaphysics and language. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose, which is intended for advanced students and professional philosophers engaged in specialized metaphysical discourse.
Page Count:
336
Publication Date:
2025-06-27
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0192872656
ISBN-13:
9780192872654
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