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The school of
analytic philosophy has dominated
academic philosophy in various regions,
most notably Great Britain and the United
States, since the early twentieth century.
It originated around the turn of the
twentieth century as G.
E. Moore and Bertrand Russell broke
away from what was then the dominant
school in the British universities,
Absolute Idealism. Many would also include
Gottlob Frege
as a founder of analytic philosophy in the
late 19th century, and this controversial
issue is discussed in section 2c. When
Moore and Russell articulated their
alternative to Idealism, they used a
linguistic idiom, frequently basing their
arguments on the meanings of
terms and propositions. Additionally,
Russell believed that the grammar of
natural language often is philosophically
misleading, and that the way to dispel the
illusion is to re-express propositions in
the ideal formal language of symbolic
logic, thereby revealing their true
logical form. Because of this emphasis on
language, analytic philosophy was widely,
though perhaps mistakenly, taken to
involve a turn toward language as the
subject matter of philosophy, and it was
taken to involve an accompanying
methodological turn toward linguistic
analysis. Thus, on the traditional view,
analytic philosophy was born in this
linguistic turn. The linguistic
conception of philosophy was rightly seen
as novel in the history of philosophy. For
this reason analytic philosophy is reputed
to have originated in a philosophical
revolution on the grand scalenot
merely in a revolt against British
Idealism, but against traditional
philosophy on the whole.
Analytic philosophy underwent several
internal micro-revolutions that divide its
history into five phases. The first phase
runs approximately from 1900 to1910. It is
characterized by the quasi-Platonic form
of realism initially endorsed by Moore and
Russell as an alternative to Idealism.
Their realism was expressed and defended
in the idiom of propositions
and meanings, so it was taken
to involve a turn toward language. But its
other significant feature is its turn away
from the method of doing philosophy by
proposing grand systems or broad syntheses
and its turn toward the method of offering
narrowly focused discussions that probe a
specific, isolated issue with precision
and attention to detail. By 1910, both
Moore and Russell had abandoned their
propositional realismMoore in favor
of a realistic philosophy of common
sense, Russell in favor of a view he
developed with Ludwig
Wittgenstein called logical
atomism. The turn to logical atomism
and to ideal-language analysis
characterizes the second phase of analytic
philosophy, approximately 1910-1930. The
third phase, approximately 1930-1945, is
characterized by the rise of logical
positivism, a view developed by the
members of the Vienna
Circle and popularized by the British
philosopher A. J. Ayer. The fourth phase,
approximately 1945-1965, is characterized
by the turn to ordinary-language
analysis, developed in various ways by
the Cambridge philosophers Ludwig
Wittgenstein and John Wisdom, and the
Oxford philosophers Gilbert Ryle, John
Austin, Peter Strawson, and Paul
Grice.
During the 1960s, criticism from within
and without caused the analytic movement
to abandon its linguistic form. Linguistic
philosophy gave way to the philosophy of
language, the philosophy of language gave
way to metaphysics, and this gave way to a
variety of philosophical sub-disciplines.
Thus the fifth phase, beginning in the mid
1960s and continuing beyond the end of the
twentieth century, is characterized by
eclecticism or pluralism. This
post-linguistic analytic philosophy cannot
be defined in terms of a common set of
philosophical views or interests, but it
can be loosely characterized in terms of
its style, which tends to emphasize
precision and thoroughness about a narrow
topic and to deemphasize the imprecise or
cavalier discussion of broad topics.
Even in its earlier phases, analytic
philosophy was difficult to define in
terms of its intrinsic features or
fundamental philosophical commitments.
Consequently, it has always relied on
contrasts with other approaches to
philosophyespecially approaches to
which it found itself fundamentally
opposedto help clarify its own
nature. Initially, it was opposed to
British Idealism, and then to "traditional
philosophy" at large. Later, it found
itself opposed both to classical
Phenomenology (for example, Husserl) and
its offspring, such as Existentialism
(Sartre,
Camus, and so
forth) and also "Continental" or
"Postmodern" philosophy (Heidegger,
Foucault
and Derrida).
Though classical Pragmatism
bears some similarity to early analytic
philosophy, especially in the work of
C. S.
Peirce and C.I.
Lewis, the pragmatists are usually
understood as constituting a separate
tradition or school.
Table of
Contents (Clicking on the
links below will take you to those
parts of this article)
1.
The Revolution of Moore and Russell:
Cambridge Realism and The Linguistic
Turn
It was towards the end of
1898, wrote Bertrand Russell,
that Moore and I rebelled
against both Kant
and Hegel.
Moore led the way, but I followed
closely in his footsteps.
I
felt
a great liberation, as if I
had escaped from a hot house onto a
windswept headland. In the first
exuberance of liberation, I became a
naïve realist and rejoiced in the
thought that grass really is green.
(Russell 1959, 22)
This important event in Russells
own intellectual history turned out to be
decisive for the history of
twentieth-century philosophy as a whole;
for it was this revolutionary break with
British Idealismthen the most
influential school of philosophical
thought in the British
universitiesthat birthed analytic
philosophy and set it on the path to
supplanting both Idealism and philosophy
as traditionally conceived and
practiced.
To understand Russells elation at
the rebellion, one needs to know something
about him and also something about British
Idealism. Lets begin with the
latter.
At the end of the 19th century, F.H.
Bradley, Bernard Bosanquet, and J.M.E.
McTaggart were the leading British
Idealists. They claimed that the world,
although it naively appears to us to be a
collection of discrete objects (this bird,
that table, the earth and the sun, and so
forth), is really a single indivisible
whole whose nature is mental, or
spiritual, or Ideal rather than material.
Thus, Idealism
was a brand of metaphysical monism, but
not a form of materialism, the other
leading form of metaphysical monism. It
was also a form of what we would now call
anti-realism, since it claimed that the
world of naïve or ordinary experience
is something of an illusion. Their claim
was not that the objects of ordinary
experience do not exist, but that they are
not, as we normally take them to be,
discrete. Instead, every object exists and
is what it is at least partly in virtue of
the relations it bears to other
thingsmore precisely, to all
other things. This was called the doctrine
of internal relations. Since, on
this view, everything that exists does so
only in virtue of its relations to
everything else, it is misleading to say
of any one thing that it exists
simpliciter. The only thing that
exists simpliciter is the
wholethe entire network of
necessarily related objects.
Correspondingly, the Idealists believed
that no statement about some isolated
object could be true simpliciter,
since, on their view, to speak of an
object in isolation would be to ignore the
greater part of the truth about it,
namely, its relations to everything
else.
Analytic philosophy began when Moore
and then Russell started to defend a
thoroughgoing realism about what Moore
called the common sense or
ordinary view of the world.
This involved a lush metaphysical
pluralism, the belief that there are
many things that exist
simpliciter. It was not this
pluralism, however, nor the content of any
of his philosophical views, that inspired
the analytic movement. Instead, it was the
manner and idiom of Moores
philosophizing. First, Moore rejected
system-building or making grand syntheses
of his views, preferring to focus on
narrowly defined philosophical problems
held in isolation. Second, when Moore
articulated his realism, he did so in the
idiom of propositions and
meanings. There is a
noteworthy ambiguity as to whether these
are linguistic items or mental ones.
This terminology is further ambiguous
in Moores case, for two reasons.
First, his views about propositions are
highly similar to a view standard in
Austro-German philosophy from Bolzano and
Lotze to Husserl according to which
propositions and
meanings have an Ideal
existencethe kind of existence
traditionally attributed to Platonic
Forms. It is likely that Moore got the
idea from reading in that tradition (cf.
Bell 1999, Willard 1984). Second, despite
strong similarities with the Austro-German
view, it is clear that, in Moores
early thought, propositions
and meanings are primarily
neither Ideal nor mental nor linguistic,
but real in the sense of
thing-like. For Moore and the
early Russell, propositions or meanings
were identical to ordinary
objectstables, cats, people. For
more on this peculiar view, see the
article on Moore,
section 2b.
The deep metaphysical complexity
attaching to Moores view was largely
overlooked or ignored by his younger
contemporaries, who were attracted to the
form of his philosophizing rather than to
its content. Taking the linguistic aspect
of propositions and
meanings to be paramount, they
saw Moore as endorsing a linguistic
approach to philosophy. This along with
his penchant for attending to isolated
philosophical problems rather than
constructing a grand system, gave rise to
the notion that he had rebelled not merely
against British Idealism but against
traditional philosophy on the grand
scale.
Though Moore was later to object that
there was nothing especially
linguistic about it (see Moore
1942b), the linguistic conception of
Moores method was far from baseless.
For instance, in a famous paper called
A Defense of Common Sense
(Moore 1925), Moore seems to argue that
the common sense view of the world is
built into the terms of our ordinary
language, so that if some philosopher
wants to say that some common sense belief
is false, he thereby disqualifies the very
medium in which he expresses himself, and
so speaks either equivocally or
nonsensically.
His case begins with the observation
that we know many things despite the fact
that we do not know how we know
them. Among these beliefs of common
sense, as he calls them, are such
propositions as There exists at
present a living human body, which is my
body, Ever since it [this
body] was born, it has been either in
contact with or not far from the surface
of the earth, and I have often
perceived both body and other things which
formed part of its environment, including
other human bodies (Moore 1925; in
Moore 1959: 33). We can call these
common sense propositions.
Moore argues that each common sense
proposition has an ordinary
meaning that specifies exactly what
it is that one knows when one knows that
proposition to be true. This
ordinary meaning is perfectly
clear to most everyone, except for some
skeptical philosophers who
seem to think that [for
example] the question Do you
believe that the earth has existed for
many years past? is not a plain
question, such as should be met either
by a plain Yes or
No, or by a plain I
cant make up my mind, but
is the sort of question which can be
properly met by: It all depends
on what you mean by the
earth and exists and
years
. (Moore
1925; in 1959: 36)
Moore thought that to call common sense
into question this way is perverse because
the ordinary meaning of a common sense
proposition is plain to all competent
language-users. So, to question its
meaning, and to suggest it has a different
meaning, is disingenuous. Moreover, since
the bounds of intelligibility seem to be
fixed by the ordinary meanings of common
sense proposition, the philosopher must
accept them as starting points for
philosophical reflection. Thus, the task
of the philosopher is not to question the
truth of common sense propositions, but to
provide their correct analyses or
explanations.
Moores use of the term
analysis in this way is the
source of the name analytic
philosophy. Early on in analytic
history, Moorean analysis was taken to be
a matter of rephrasing some common sense
proposition so as to yield greater insight
into its already-clear and unquestionable
meaning. For example, just as one
elucidates the meaning of
brother by saying a brother is
a male sibling or by saying it means
male sibling, so one might say
that seeing a hand means experiencing a
certain external objectwhich is
exactly what Moore claims in his paper
Proof of an External World
(Moore 1939).
The argument of that essay runs as
follows. Here is one hand is a
common sense proposition with an ordinary
meaning. Using it in accordance with that
meaning, presenting the hand for
inspection is sufficient proof that the
proposition is truethat there is
indeed a hand there. But a hand, according
to the ordinary meaning of
hand, is a material object,
and a material object, according to the
ordinary meaning of material
object, is an external object, an
object that isnt just in our mind.
Thus, since we can prove that there is a
hand there, and since a hand is an
external object, there is an external
world, according to the ordinary meaning
of external world.
These examples are from papers written
in the second half of Moores career,
but his linguistic method can
be discerned much earlier, in works dating
all the way back to the late
1800sthe period of his rebellion
against Idealism. Even in Moores
first influential paper, The Nature
of Judgment (Moore 1899), he can be
found paying very close attention to
propositions and their meanings. In his
celebrated paper, The Refutation of
Idealism (Moore 1903b), Moore uses
linguistic analysis to argue against the
Idealists slogan Esse
est percipi (to be is to be
perceived). Moore reads the slogan as a
definition or, as he would later call it,
an analysis: just as we say
bachelor means unmarried
man, so the Idealist says to
exist means to be
cognized. However, if these bits of
language had the same meaning, Moore
argues, it would be superfluous to assert
that they were identical, just as it is
superfluous to say a bachelor is a
bachelor. The fact that the Idealist
sees some need to assert the formula
reveals that there is a difference in
meanings of to be and to
be perceived, and hence a difference
in the corresponding phenomena as
well.
Moores most famous
meaning-centered argument is perhaps the
open question argument of his
Principia Ethica (Moore 1903a). The
open question argument purports to show
that it is a mistake to define
good in terms of anything
other than itself. For any definition of
goodgoodness is
pleasure, sayit makes sense to
ask whether goodness really is
pleasure (or whatever it has been
identified with); thus, every attempt at
definition leaves it an open question as
to what good really is. This is so because
every purported definition fails to
capture the meaning of
good.
All of these cases exhibit what proved
to be the most influential aspect of
Moores philosophical work, namely
his method of analysis, which many of his
contemporaries took to be
linguistic analysis. For instance,
Norman Malcolm represents the standard
view of Moore for much of the twentieth
century when he says that the
essence of Moores technique of
refuting philosophical statements consists
in pointing out that these statements go
against ordinary language (Malcolm
1942, 349). In the same essay, he goes on
to tie Moores entire philosophical
legacy to his linguistic
method:
Moores great historical
role consists in the fact that he has
been perhaps the first philosopher to
sense that any philosophical statement
that violates ordinary language is
false, and consistently to defend
ordinary language against its
philosophical violators. (Malcolm 1942,
368)
Malcolm is right to note the novelty of
Moores approach. Although previous
philosophers occasionally had
philosophized about language, and had, in
their philosophizing, paid close attention
to the way language was used, none had
ever claimed that philosophizing itself
was merely a matter of analyzing language.
Of course, Moore did not make this claim
either, but what Moore actually did
as a philosopher seemed to make saying it
superfluousin practice, he seemed to
be doing exactly what Malcolm said he was
doing.
Thus, though it took some time for the
philosophical community to realize it, it
eventually became clear that this new
linguistic method, pioneered
by Moore, constituted a radical break not
only with the British Idealists but with
the larger philosophical tradition itself.
To put it generally, philosophy was
traditionally understood as the practice
of reasoning about the world. Its goal was
to give a logosa rationally
coherent accountof the world and its
parts at various levels of granularity,
but ultimately as a whole and at the most
general level. There were other aspects of
the project, too, of course, but this was
the heart of it. With Moore, however,
philosophy seemed to be recast as the
practice of linguistic analysis applied to
isolated issues. Thus, the rise of
analytic philosophy, understood as the
relatively continuous growth of a new
philosophical school originating in
Moores linguistic turn,
was eventually recognized as being not
just the emergence of another
philosophical school, but as constituting
a revolution in philosophy at
large. (See Ayer et al. 1963 and
Tugendhat 1982.)
2.
Russell and the Early Wittgenstein: Ideal
Language and Logical
Atomism
The second phase of analytic philosophy
is charaterized by the turn to ideal
language analysis and, along with it,
logical atomisma metaphysical system
developed by Bertrand Russell and Ludwig
Wittgenstein. Russell laid the essential
groundwork for both in his pioneering work
in formal logic, which is covered in
Sections 2a and 2b. Though this work was
done during the first phase of analytic
philosophy (1900-1910), it colaesced into
a system only toward the end of that
period, as Russell and Whitehead completed
their work on the monumental Principia
Mathematica (Russell and Whitehead
1910-13), and as Russell began to work
closely with Ludwig Wittgenstein.
Wittgenstein seems to have been the
sine qua non of the system. Russell
was the first to use the term
logical atomism, in a 1911
lecture to the French Philosophical
Society. He was also the first to publicly
provide a full-length, systematic
treatment of it, in his 1918 lectures on
The Philosophy of Logical
Atomism (Russell 1918-19). However,
despite the centrality of Russells
logical work for the system, in the
opening paragraph of these lectures
Russell acknowedges that they are
very largely concerned with explaining
certain ideas which I learnt from my
friend and former pupil Ludwig
Wittgenstein (Russell 1918, 35).
Wittgenstein's own views are recorded in
his Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus.
First published in 1921, the
Tractatus proved to be the most
influential piece written on logical
atomism. Because of its influence, we
shall pay special attention to the
Tractatus when it comes to
presenting logical atomism as a complete
system in Section 2d.
Though Russell and Wittgenstein
differed over some of the details of
logical atomism, these disagreements can
be ignored for present purposes. What
mattered for the development of analytic
philosophy on the whole was the emergence
in the second decade of the twentieth
century of a new view of reality tailored
to fit recent developments in formal logic
and the philosophical methodology
connected to it, as discussed in Section
2b. This was the common core of the
Russellian and Wittegensteinian versions
of logical atomism; thus, blurring the
lines between Russell and Wittgenstein
actually enables us to maintain better
focus on the emerging analytic tradition.
It will also make convenient a brief word
on Frege, to see why some have wanted to
include him as a founder of analytic
philosophy (Section 2c).
a.
The Theory of Descriptions
Much of Russells exuberance over
Moores realism had to do with its
consequences for logic and mathematics.
Like so many philosophers before him,
Russell was attracted to the objective
certainty of mathematical and logical
truths. However, because Idealism taught
that no proposition about a bit of reality
in isolation could be true
simpliciter, an apparently
straightforward truth such as
2+2=4, or If a=b and b=c then
a=c, was not so straightforward after
all. Even worse, Idealism made such truths
dependent upon their being thought or
conceived. This follows from the doctrine
of internal relations; for, on the natural
assumption that knowledge is or involves a
relation between a knower (subject) and
something known (object), the doctrine
implies that objects of knowledge are not
independent of the subjects that know
them. This left Idealism open to the
charge of endorsing
psychologismthe view that
apparently objective truths are to be
accounted for in terms of the operations
of subjective cognitive or
psychological faculties.
Psychologism was common to nearly all
versions of Kantian and post-Kantian
Idealism (including British Idealism). It
was also a common feature of thought in
the British empirical tradition, from Hume
to Mill (albeit with a naturalistic
twist). Moores early realism allowed
Russell to avoid psychologism and other
aspects of Idealism that prevented
treating logical and mathematical truths
as absolutely true in themselves.
A crucial part of this early realism,
however, was the object theory of
meaning; and this had implications
that Russell found unacceptable. On the
object theory, the meaning of a sentence
is the object or state of affairs to which
it refers (this is one reason why Moore
could identify ordinary objects as
propositions or meanings; see Section 1).
For instance, the sentence that leaf
is green is meaningful in virtue of
bearing a special relationship to the
state of affairs it is about,
namely, a certain leafs being
green.
This may seem plausible at first
glance; problems emerge, however, when one
recognizes that the class of meaningful
sentences includes many that, from an
empirical point of view, lack objects. Any
statement referring to something that does
not exist, such as a fictional character
in a novel, will have this problem. A
particularly interesting species of this
genus is the negative existential
statementstatements that express the
denial of their subjects existence.
For example, when we say The golden
mountain does not exist, we seem to
refer to a golden mountaina
nonexistent objectin the very act of
denying its existence. But, on the object
theory, if this sentence is to be
meaningful, it must have an object to
serve as its meaning. Thus it seems that
the object theorist is faced with a
dilemma: either give-up the object theory
of meaning or postulate a realm of
non-empirical objects that stand as the
meanings of these apparently objectless
sentences.
The Austrian philosopher Alexius
Meinong took the latter horn of the
dilemma, notoriously postulating a realm
of non-existent objects. This alternative
was too much for Russell. Instead, he
found a way of going between the horns of
the dilemma. His escape route was called
the theory of descriptions, a
bit of creative reasoning that the
logician F. P. Ramsey called a
paradigm of philosophy, and
one which helped to stimulate
extraordinary social momentum for the
budding analytic movement. The theory of
descriptions appears in Russells
1905 essay, On Denoting, which
has become a central text in the analytic
canon. There, Russell argues that
denoting phrasesphrases
that involve a noun preceded by
a, an,
some, any,
every, all, or
theare incomplete
symbols; that is, they have no meaning on
their own, but only in the context of a
complete sentence that expresses a
proposition. Such sentences can be
rephrasedanalyzed in
Moores sense of
analyzedinto sentences
that are meaningful and yet do not refer
to anything nonexistent.
For instance, according to Russell,
saying The golden mountain does not
exist is really just a misleading
way of saying It is not the case
that there is exactly one thing that is a
mountain and is golden. Thus
analyzed, it becomes clear that the
proposition does not refer to anything,
but simply denies an existential claim.
Since it does not refer to any
golden mountain, it does not
need a Meinongian object to provide it
with meaning. In fact, taking the latter
formulation to be the true logical
form of the statement, Russell
construes the originals reference to
a non-existent golden mountain as a matter
of grammatical illusion. One dispels the
illusion by making the grammatical form
match the true logical form, and this is
done through logical analysis. The idea
that language could cast illusions that
needed to be dispelled, some form of
linguistic analysis was to be a prominent
theme in analytic philosophy, both in its
ideal language and ordinary language
camps, through roughly 1960.
b.
Ideal-Language Philosophy vs.
Ordinary-Language
Philosophy
Russellian analysis has just been just
identified as logical rather than
linguistic analysis, and yet it was
said in a previous paragraph that this was
analysis in the sense made familiar by
Moore. In truth, there were both
significant similarities and significant
differences between Moorean and Russellian
analysis. On the one hand, Russellian
analysis was like Moores in that it
involved the rephrasing of a sentence into
another sentence semantically equivalent
but grammatically different. On the other
hand, Russells analyses were not
given in ordinary language, as
Moores were. Instead, they were
given in symbolic logic, that is, in a
quasi-mathematical, symbolic notation that
made the structure of Russells
analyzed propositions exceedingly clear.
For instance, with the definitions of Mx
as x is a mountain and Gx as
x is golden, the proposition
that the golden mountain does not
exist becomes
~((∃x)(Mx
& Gx) & y((My
& Gy)
y=x))
Equivalently, in English, it is not the
case that there is some object such that
(1) it is a mountain, (2) it is golden,
and (3) all objects that are mountains and
golden are identical to it. (For more on
what this sort of notation looks like and
how it works, see the article on Propositional
Logic, especially Section 3.)
By 1910, Russell, along with Alfred
North Whitehead, had so developed this
symbolic notation and the rules governing
its use that it constituted a fairly
complete system of formal logic. This they
published in the three volumes of their
monumental Principia Mathematica
(Russell and Whitehead 1910-1913).
Within the analytic movement, the
Principia was received as providing
an ideal language, capable of
elucidating all sorts of ordinary-language
confusions. Consequently, Russellian
logical analysis was seen as a new species
of the genus linguistic analysis,
which had already been established by
Moore. Furthermore, many took logical
analysis to be superior to Moores
ordinary-language analysis insofar as its
results (its analyses) were more exact and
not themselves prone to further
misunderstandings or illusions.
The distinction between
ordinary-language philosophy and
ideal-language philosophy formed the basis
for a fundamental division within the
analytic movement through the early 1960s.
The introduction of logical analysis also
laid the groundwork for logical atomism, a
new metaphysical system developed by
Russell and Ludwig Wittgenstein. Before we
discuss this directly, however, we must
say a word about Gottlob Frege.
c.
Frege: Influence or
Instigator?
In developing the formal system of
Principia Mathematica, Russell
relied heavily on the work of several
forebears including the German
mathematician and philosopher Gottlob
Frege. A generation before Russell and the
Principia, Frege had provided his
own system of formal logic, with its own
system of symbolic notation. Freges
goal in doing so was to prove
logicism, the view that mathematics
is reducible to logic. This was also
Russells goal in the
Principia. (For more on the
development of logic in the late 19th and
early 20th centuries, see the article on
Propositional
Logic, especially Section 2). Frege
also anticipated Russells notion of
incomplete symbols by invoking what has
come to be called the context
principle: words have meaning only
in the context of complete sentences.
Freges focus on the formalization
and symbolization of logic naturally led
him into terrain that we would now
classify as falling under the philosophy
of language, and to approach certain
philosophical problems as if they were
problems about language, or at least as if
they could be resolved by linguistic
means. This has led some to see in Frege a
linguistic turn similar to that
perceivable in the early work of Moore and
Russell (on this point, see the article on
Frege and
Language).
Because of these similarities and
anticipations, and because Russell
explicitly relied on Freges work,
many have seen Frege as a founder of
analytic philosophy more or less on a par
with Moore and Russell (See Dummett 1993
and Kenny 2000). Others see this as an
exaggeration both of Freges role and
of the similarities between him and other
canonical analysts. For instance, Peter
Hacker notes that Frege was not interested
in reforming philosophy the way all the
early analysts were:
Freges professional life
was a single-minded pursuit of a
demonstration that arithmetic had its
foundations in pure logic alone
One will search Freges works in
vain for a systematic discussion of the
nature of philosophy. (Hacker 1986: 5,
7)
There is no doubt that Freges
views proved crucially useful and
inspiring to key players on the
ideal-language side of analytic
philosophy. Whether or not this qualifies
him as a founder of analytic philosophy
depends on the extent to which we see the
analytic movement as born of a desire for
metaphilosophical revolution on the grand
scale. To the extent that this is
essential to our understanding of analytic
philosophy, Freges role will be that
of an influence rather than a founder.
d.
Logical Atomism and Wittgensteins
Tractatus
Ludwig Wittgenstein came to Cambridge
to study mathematical logic under Russell,
but he quickly established himself as his
teachers intellectual peer.
Together, they devised a metaphysical
system called logical atomism.
As discussed at the beginning of Section
2, qua total system, logical
atomism seems to have been
Wittgensteins brainchild. Still,
this should not be seen as in any way
marginalizing Russells significance
for the system, which can be described as
a metaphysics based on the assumption that
an ideal language the likes of which was
provided in Principia Mathematica
is the key to reality.
According to logical atomism,
propositions are built out of elements
corresponding to the basic constituents of
the world, just as sentences are built out
of words. The combination of words in a
meaningful sentence mirrors the
combination of constituents in the
corresponding proposition and also in the
corresponding possible or actual state of
affairs. That is, the structure of every
possible or actual state of affairs is
isomorphic with both the structure of the
proposition that refers to it and the
structure of the sentence that expresses
that proposition--so long as the sentence
is properly formulated in the notation of
symbolic logic. The simplest sort of
combination is called an atomic
fact because this fact has no
sub-facts as part of its structure. An
atomic fact for some logical atomists
might be something like an individual
having a propertya certain
leafs being green, for instance.
Linguistically, this fact is represented
by an atomic proposition: for
example, this leaf is green,
or, in logical symbolism
F(a). Both the
fact F(a) and the proposition
F(a) are called
atomic not because they
themselves are atomic [that is,
without structure], but because all
their constituents are. Atomic facts are
the basic constituents of the world, and
atomic propositions are the basic
constituents of language.
More complex propositions representing
more complex facts are called molecular
propositions and molecular
facts. The propositions are made
by linking atomic propositions together
with truth-functional connectives, such as
and, or and
not. A truth-functional
connective is one that combines
constituent propositions in such a way
that their truth-values (that is, their
respective statuses as true or false)
completely determine the truth value of
the resulting molecular proposition. For
instance, the truth value of a proposition
of the form not-p can be
characterized in terms of, and hence
treated as determined by, the truth value
of p because if p
is true, then not-p is false,
and if it is false, not-p is
true. Similarly, a proposition of the form
p and q will be true if and
only if its constituent propositions
p and q are true
on their own.
The logic of Principia
Mathematica is entirely
truth-functional; that is, it only allows
for molecular propositions whose
truth-values are determined by their
atomic constituents. Thus, as Russell
observed in the introduction to the second
edition of the Principia,
given all true atomic propositions,
together with the fact that they are all,
every other true proposition can
theoretically be deduced by logical
methods (Russell 1925, xv). The same
assumptioncalled the thesis of
truth-functionality or the thesis
of extensionalitylies behind
Wittgenstiens Tractatus
Logico-Philosophicus.
As mentioned previously,
Wittgensteins Tractatus
proved to be the most influential
expression of logical atomism. The
Tractatus is organized around seven
propositions, here taken from the 1922
translation by C. K. Ogden:
- The world is everything that is the
case.
- What is the case, the fact, is the
existence of atomic facts.
- The logical picture of the facts is
the thought.
- The thought is the significant
proposition.
- Propositions are truth-functions of
elementary propositions. (An elementary
proposition is a truth function of
itself.)
- The general form of a
truth-function is.... This is the
general form of a proposition.
- Whereof one cannot speak, thereof
one must be silent.
The body of the Tractatus
consists in cascading levels of numbered
elaborations of these propositions (1 is
elaborated by 1.1 which is elaborated by
1.11, 1.12 and 1.13, and so
forth)except for 7, which stands on
its own. Propositions 1 and 2 establish
the metaphysical side of logical atomism:
the world is nothing but a complex of
atomic facts. Propositions 3 and 4
establish the isomorphism between language
and reality: a significant (meaningful)
proposition is a "logical picture" of the
facts that constitute some possible or
actual state of affairs. It is a picture
in the sense that the structure of
the proposition is identical to the
structure of the corresponding
atomic facts. It is here, incidentally,
that we get the first explicit statement
of the metaphilosophical view
characteristic of early analytic
philosophy: All philosophy is a
critique of language ...
(4.0031).
Proposition 5 asserts the thesis of
truth-functionality, the view that all
complex propositions are built out of
atomic propositions joined by
truth-functional connectives, and that
atomic propositions are truth-functional
in themselves. Even existentially
quantified propositions are considered to
be long disjunctions of atomic
propositions. It has since been recognized
that a truth-functional logic is not
adequate to capture all the phenomena of
the world; or at least that, if there is
an adequate truth-functional system, we
haven't found it yet. Certain phenomena
seem to defy truth-functional
characterization; for instance, moral
facts are problematic. Knowing whether the
constituent proposition p is
true, doesnt seem to tell us whether
It ought to be the case that p
is true. Similarly problematical are facts
about thoughts, beliefs, and other mental
states (captured in statements such as
John believes that
), and
modal facts (captured in statements about
the necessity or possibility of certain
states of affairs). And treating
existential quantifiers as long
disjunctions doesnt seem to be
adequate for the infinite number of facts
about numbers since there surely are more
real numbers than there are available
names to name them even if we were willing
to accept infinitely long disjunctions.
The hope that truth-functional logic will
prove adequate for resolving all these
problems has inspired a good bit of
thinking in the analytic tradition,
especially during the first half of the
twentieth century. This hope lies at the
heart of logical atomism.
In its full form, Proposition 6
includes some unusual symbolism that is
not reproduced here. All it does,
however, is to give a general
recipe for the creation of
molecular propositions by giving the
general form of a truth-function.
Basically, Wittgenstein is saying that all
propositions are truth-functional, and
that, ultimately, there is only one kind
of truth-function. Principia
Mathematica had employed a number of
truth-functional connectives:
and, or,
not, and so forth.
However, in 1913 a logician named Henry
Sheffer showed that propositions involving
these connectives could be rephrased
(analyzed) as propositions involving a
single connective consisting in the
negation of a conjunction. This was called
the not and or
nand connective, and was
supposed to be equivalent to the ordinary
language formulation not both x and
y. It is usually symbolized by a
short vertical line ( | ) called the
Sheffer stroke. Though Wittgenstein uses
his own idiosyncratic symbolism, this is
the operation identified in proposition 6
and some of its elaborations as showing
the general form of a truth-function.
Replacing the Principias
plurality of connectives with the
nand connective made for an
extremely minimalistic systemall one
needed to construct a complete
picture/description of the world was a
single truth-functional connective applied
repeatedly to the set of all atomic
propositions.
Proposition 7, which stands on its own,
is the culmination of a series of
observations made throughout the
Tractatus, and especially in the
elaborations of proposition 6. Throughout
the Tractatus there runs a
distinction between showing and
saying. Saying is a matter of
expressing a meaningful proposition.
Showing is a matter of presenting
somethings form or structure. Thus,
as Wittgenstein observes at 4.022, A
proposition shows its sense. A
proposition shows how things stand
if it is true. And it says
that they do so stand.
In the introduction to the
Tractatus, Wittgenstein indicates
that his overarching purpose is to set the
criteria and limits of meaningful
saying. The structural aspects of
language and the worldthose aspects
that are shownfall beyond the
limits of meaningful saying. According to
Wittgenstein, the propositions of logic
and mathematics are purely structural and
therefore meaninglessthey show the
form of all possible
propositions/states of affairs, but they
do not themselves picture any particular
state of affairs, thus they do not say
anything. This has the odd consequence
that the propositions of the
Tractatus themselves, which are
supposed to be about logic, are
meaningless. Hence the famous dictum at
6.54:
My propositions are
elucidatory in this way: he who
understands me finally recognizes them
as senseless, when he has climbed out
through them, on them, over them. (He
must so to speak throw away the ladder,
after he has climbed up on it.) He must
transcend these propositions, and then
he will see the world aright.
Though meaningless, the propositions of
logic and mathematics are not nonsense.
They at least have the virtue of showing
the essential structure of all possible
facts. On the other hand, there are
concatenations of words, purported
propositions, that neither show nor say
anything and thus are not connected to
reality in any way. Such propositions are
not merely senseless, they are nonsense.
Among nonsense propositions are included
the bulk of traditional philosophical
statements articulating traditional
philosophical problems and solutions,
especially in metaphysics and ethics. This
is the consequence of Wittgensteins
presumption that meaningfulness is somehow
linked to the realm of phenomena studied
by the natural sciences (cf. 4.11 ff).
Thus, as he claims in 6.53:
The correct method in
philosophy would really be the
following: to say nothing except what
can be said, that is propositions of
natural sciencethat is something
that has nothing to do with
philosophyand then, whenever
someone else wanted to say something
metaphysical, to demonstrate to him
that he had failed to give a meaning to
certain signs in his propositions.
In the eyes of its author (as he avers
in its Introduction), the real
accomplishment of the Tractatus was
to have solved, or rather
dissolved, all the traditional
problems of philosophy by showing that
they were meaningless conundrums generated
by a failure to understand the limits of
meaningful discourse.
3.
Logical Positivism, the Vienna Circle, and
Quine
a.
Logical Positivism and the Vienna
Circle
Logical positivism is the result of
combining the central aspects of the
positivisms of Auguste Comte and Ernst
Mach with the meta-philosophical and
methodological views of the analytic
movement, especially as understood by the
ideal-language camp. In all its forms,
positivism was animated by the
idealization of scientific knowledge as it
was commonly understood from at least the
time of Newton through the early twentieth
century. Consequently, at its core is a
view called scientism: the view
that all knowledge is scientific
knowledge.
As twentieth-century philosophy of
science has shown, the definition and
demarcation of science is a very difficult
task. Still, for several centuries it has
been common to presume that metaphysics
and other branches of
philosophy-as-traditionally-practiced, not
to mention religious and common
sense beliefs, do not qualify as
scientific. From the standpoint of
scientism, these are not fields of
knowledge, and their claims should not be
regarded as carrying any serious
weight.
At the heart of logical positivism was
a novel way of dismissing certain
non-scientific views by declaring them not
merely wrong or false, but
meaningless. According to the
verification theory of meaning,
sometimes also called the empiricist
theory of meaning, any
non-tautological statement has meaning if
and only if it can be empirically
verified. This verification
principle of meaning is similar to
the principle maintained in
Wittgensteins Tractatus that
the realm of meaning is coextensive with
the realm of the natural (empirical)
sciences. In fact the logical positivists
drew many of their views straight from the
pages of the Tractatus (though
their reading of it has since been
criticized as being too inclined to
emphasize the parts friendly to scientific
naturalism at the expense of those
less-friendly). With Wittgenstein, the
logical positivists concluded that the
bulk of traditional philosophy consisted
in meaningless pseudo-problems generated
by the misuse of language, and that the
true role of philosophy was to establish
and enforce the limits of meaningful
language through linguistic analysis.
Logical positivism was created and
promoted mainly by a number of
Austro-German thinkers associated with the
Vienna Circle and, to a lesser extent, the
Berlin
Circle. The Vienna Circle began as a
discussion group of scientifically-minded
philosophersor perhaps
philosophically
minded-scientistsorganized by Moritz
Schlick in 1922. Its exact membership is
difficult to determine, since there were a
number of peripheral figures who attended
its meetings or at least had substantial
connections to core members, but who are
frequently characterized as visitors or
associates rather than full-fledged
members. Among its most prominent members
were Schlick himself, Otto Neurath,
Herbert Feigl, Freidrich Waismann and,
perhaps most prominent of all, Rudolph
Carnap. The members of both Circles
made contributions to a number of
different philosophical and scientific
discussions, including logic and the
philosophy of mind (see for example this
Encyclopedias articles on Behaviorism
and Identity
Theory); however, their most important
contributions vis-à-vis the
development of analytic philosophy were in
the areas of the philosophy of language,
philosophical methodology and
metaphilosophy. It was their views in
these areas that combined to form logical
positivism.
Logical positivism was popularized in
Britain by A.J. Ayer, who visited with the
Vienna Circle in 1933. His book
Language, Truth and Logic (Ayer
1936) was extremely influential, and
remains the best introduction to logical
positivism as understood in its heyday. To
escape the turmoil of World War II,
several members of the Vienna Circle
emigrated to the United States where they
secured teaching posts and exercised an
immense influence on academic philosophy.
By this time, however, logical positivism
was largely past its prime; consequently,
it was not so much logical positivism
proper that was promulgated, but something
more in the direction of philosophizing
focused on language, logic, and science.
(For more on this point, see the article
on American
Philosophy, especially Section 4).
Ironically, the demise of logical
positivism was caused mainly by a fatal
flaw in its central view, the verification
theory of meaning. According to the
verification principle, a non-tautological
statement has meaning if and only if it
can be empirically verified. However, the
verification principle itself is
non-tautological but cannot be
empirically verified. Consequently, it
renders itself meaningless. Even apart
from this devastating problem, there were
difficulties in setting the scope of the
principle so as to properly subserve the
positivists scientistic aims. In its
strong form (given above), the principle
undermined not only itself, but also
statements about theoretical entities, so
necessary for science to do its work. On
the other hand, weaker versions of the
principle, such as that given in the
second edition of Ayers Language,
Truth, and Logic (1946), were
incapable of eliminating the full range of
metaphysical and other non-scientific
statements that the positivists wanted to
disqualify.
b. W.
V. Quine
Willard Van Orman Quine is the first
American philosopher of any great
significance in the analytic tradition.
Though his views had their greatest impact
only as the era of linguistic philosophy
came to an end, it is convenient to take
them up in contrast with logical
positivism.
An important part of the logical
positivist program was the attempt to
analyze or reduce scientific
statements into so-called protocol
statements having to do with empirical
observations. This reductionist project
was taken up by several members of the
Vienna Circle, but none took it so far as
did Rudolph Carnap, in his The Logical
Structure of the World (1928) and in
subsequent work.
The basic problem for the reductionist
project is that many important scientific
claims and concepts seem to go beyond what
can be verified empirically. Claiming that
the sun will come up tomorrow is a claim
the goes beyond todays observations.
Claims about theoretical entities such as
atoms also provide obvious cases of going
beyond what can be verified by specific
observations, but statements of scientific
law run into essentially the same problem.
Assuming empiricism, what is required to
place scientific claims on a secure,
epistemic foundation is to eliminate the
gap between observation and theory without
introducing further unverifiable entities
or views. This was the goal of the
reductionist project. By showing that
every apparently unverifiable claim in
science could be analyzed into a small set
of observation-sentences, the logical
positivists hoped to show that the gap
between observation and theory does not
really exist.
Despite being on very friendly terms
with Carnap and other members of the
Vienna Circle (with whom he visited in the
early 1930s), and despite being dedicated,
as they were, to scientism and empiricism,
Quine
argued that the reductionist project was
hopeless. Modern Empiricism,
he claimed,
has been conditioned in large
part by two dogmas. One is a belief in
some fundamental cleavage between
truths which are analytic, or
grounded in meanings independently of
matters of fact, and truths which are
synthetic, or grounded in fact.
The other dogma is reductionism:
the belief that each meaningful
statement is equivalent to some logical
construct upon terms which refer to
immediate experience. (Quine 1951, 20)
Both dogmas, says Quine,
are ill-founded.
The first dogma with which Quine is
concerned is that there is an important
distinction to be made between
analytic and synthetic
claims. Traditionally, the notions of
analytic truth,
a priori truth, and
necessary truth have been closely
linked to one another, forming a
conceptual network that stands over
against the supposedly contradictory
network of a
posteriori, contingent, and
synthetic truths. Each of these
categories will be explained briefly prior
to addressing Quines critique of
this dogma (for a more
extensive treatment see the article on
A Priori and A
Posteriori).
An a priori truth is a
proposition that can be known to be true
by intuition or pure reason, without
making empirical observations. For
instance, neither mathematical truths such
as 2+2=4, nor logical truths such
as If ((a=b) &(b=c)) then
(a=c), nor semantic truths such as
All bachelors are unmarried men,
depend upon the realization of any
corresponding, worldly state of affairs,
either in order to be true or to be known.
A posteriori truths, on the other
hand, are truths grounded in or at least
known only by experience, including both
mundane truths such as The cat is on
the mat and scientific truths such as
Bodies in free-fall accelerate at 9.8
m/s2.
Many (if not all) a priori
truths seem to be necessarythat is,
they could not have been otherwise. On the
other hand, many (if not all) a
posteriori truths seem to be
contingentthat is, that they could
have been otherwise: the cat might not
have been on the mat, and, for all we
know, the rate of acceleration for bodies
in freefall might have been different than
what it is.
Finally, the necessity and a
prioricity of such truths seem to be
linked to their analyticity. A proposition
is analytically true if the meanings of
its terms require it to be true. For
example, the proposition All
bachelors are men is analytically
true, because man is connected
to bachelor" in virtue of its
meaninga fact recognized by
analyzing bachelor so
as to see that it means unmarried
man. On the other hand, All
bachelors have left the room is not
analytically true. It is called a
synthetic proposition or truth,
because it involves terms or concepts that
are not connected analytically by their
individual meanings, but only insofar as
they are synthesized (brought
together) in the proposition itself. Such
truths are usually, and perhaps always,
a posteriori and contingent.
Historically, philosophers have tended
to try to explain necessity, a
prioricity and analyticity by
appealing to abstract objects such as
Platos
Forms or Aristotles
essences. Such entities purportedly
transcend the realm of time, space, and/or
the senses, and hence the realm of
nature as defined by
scienceat least as this was
understood by the scientific naturalism of
the late nineteenth and early twentieth
centuries. Consequently, devotees of
scientific naturalism required an
alternative account of necessity, a
priority, and analyticity; and here
analytic philosophys linguistic turn
seemed to offer a way forward.
For obvious reasons, and as the above
quotation from Quine hints, analytic
truths traditionally have been
characterized as true in virtue of
meaning. However, historically,
meaning has been cashed out in
different ways: in terms of abstract,
Ideal entities (Plato, Aristotle,
Husserl), and in terms of concepts (Locke,
Hume), and in terms of language (construed
as a system of concrete, sensible symbols
with conventionally approved uses). In the
context of analytic philosophys
linguistic turn, it was all
too easy to take the latter approach, and
hence to treat analyticity as deriving
from some linguistic phenomenon such as
synonymy or the interchangeability of
terms.
Such a view was highly amenable to the
scientistic, naturalistic, and
empiricistic leanings of many early
analysts, and especially to the logical
positivists. On the assumptions that
meaning is fundamentally linguistic and
that language is a conventional
symbol-system in which the symbols are
assigned meanings by fiat, one can explain
synonymy without referring to anything
beyond the realm of time, space and the
senses. If one can then explain
analyticity in terms of synonymy, and
explain both necessity and a
prioricity in terms of analyticity,
then one will have theories of analytic,
necessary, and a priori truths
consistent with scientific naturalism.
Given Quines own commitment to
scientific naturalism, one might have
expected him to join the logical
positivists and others in embracing this
model and then striving for a workable
version of it. However, Quine proposed a
more radical solution to the scientific
naturalists problem with necessity,
a prioricity, and analyticity:
namely, he proposed to reject the
distinctions between analytic and
synthetic, a priori and a
posteriori, necessary and
contingent.
He begins undermining the notion that
synonymy-relations are established by fiat
or stipulative definition. On
the naturalistic view of language and
meaning, all meanings and synonymy
relations would have to have been
established by some person or people
making stipulative definitions at some
particular place and time. For instance,
someone would have had to have said, at
some point in history, henceforth,
the symbol bachelor shall be
interchangeable with the symbol
unmarried man. However,
Quine asks rhetorically, who defined
it thus, or when? (Quine 1951, 24).
The point is that we have no evidence of
this ever having happened. Thus, at the
very least, the naturalistic account of
meaning/synonymy is an unverifiable theory
of the sort the positivists wanted to
avoid. Moreover, what empirical evidence
we do have suggests that it is likely
false, for, as Quine sees it,
definitionexcept in the
extreme case of the explicitly
conventional introduction of new
notationhinges on prior
relationships of synonymy (Quine
1951, 27). In cases where it appears that
someone is making a stipulative
definitionas in a dictionary, for
exampleQuine explains that, far from
establishing synonymy, the stipulator is
either describing or making use of
synonymy relations already present in the
language. After exploring several kinds of
cases in which stipulative definitions
seem to establish synonymy relations, he
concludes that all but onethe banal
act of coining an abbreviationrely
on pre-existing synonymy relations. The
upshot is that stipulative definition
cannot account for the breadth of cases in
which synonymy is exemplified, and thus
that it cannot be the general ground of
either synonymy or analyticity.
With its foundation thus undermined,
the naturalistic theory of analyticity,
necessity and a prioricity
collapses. However, rather than rejecting
naturalism on account of its inability to
explain these phenomena, Quine rejects the
notion that naturalism needs to explain
them on the ground that they are spurious
categories. Prima facie, of course,
there seems to be a distinction between
the analytic and the synthetic, the a
priori and the a posteriori,
the necessary and the contingent. However,
when we attempt to get a deeper
understanding of these phenomena by
defining them, we cannot do it. Quine
explores several other ways of defining
analyticity in addition to synonymy and
stipulative definition, ultimately
concluding that none work. To the
contrary, analyticity, synonymy, necessity
and related concepts seem to contribute to
each others meaning/definition in a
way that is not flatly circular, but
something like it. It has the form,
figuratively speaking, of a closed curve
in space (Quine 1951, 29). Because
none of them can be defined without
invoking one of the others, no one of them
can be eliminated by reducing it to one of
the others. Rather than concluding that
analyticity, a prioricity,
necessity, and so forth are primitive
phenomena, Quine takes their
indefinability to indicate that there is
no genuine distinction to be drawn between
them and their traditional opposites.
This brings us to the second dogma.
When Quine criticizes
reductionism, he has
principally in mind the logical
positivists tendency to pursue the
reductionist project as if every and any
scientific statement, considered in
isolation, could be reduced to/analyzed
into a small set of observational
statements related to it in such a way
that they counted uniquely as that
claims verification and meaning.
Over against this atomistic or
isolationist or
local conception of
verification/reductive analysis, Quine
argued that scientific claims have
predictive power, and hence verifiability
or falsifiability, and hence also meaning,
only as parts of large networks of claims
that together form far-reaching theories
that might be called
worldviews. For this reason,
one can never verify or falsify an
isolated scientific claim; rather,
verification and falsificationand
hence also meaningare
holistic. Observations (and
observation sentences) that may
seem to verify a lone claim
actually make a partial contribution to
the verification of the total theoretical
network to which it belongs.
As the language here suggests, viewed
holistically, verification is never
absolute. There is no manageable set of
observations that will verify a total
theory or any of its constitutive claims
once and for all. By the same token,
observations (and observation sentences)
that may seem to falsify a lone claim do
not decisively falsify either it or the
theory to which it belongs. Rather, such
observations require only that some
adjustment be made to the theory. Perhaps
one of its constitutive claims must
be rejected, but not necessarily the one
that initially seemed to be falsified. On
Quines view, any constitutive claim
can be saved by making adjustments
elsewhere in the theory-network.
This holistic view of meaning and
verification reinforces Quines
rejection of the analytic/synthetic
distinction and its fellows. Holism in
these areas implies that no claim in
ones total theory is immune from
revision or rejection in light of
observational evidence. This means that
even claims traditionally thought to be
necessary and/or analytic, such as those
of mathematics and logic, can be revised
or rejected in order to preserve other
claims to which one is more deeply
committed.
Quines assault on the
analytic/synthetic distinction undermines
not merely the positivists
reductionist project, but also the general
practice of analysis which, from the
beginning, had been understood to involve
the transformation of a sentence into
another sentence semantically equivalent
(synonymous) but grammatically different.
At the same time, Quines holism
about the meaning of scientific claims and
their verification generalizes to become a
theory of meaning holism that
applies to all meaningful claims
whatsoever. However, following
Moores practice, the analytic method
was usually applied to claims in
isolation, apart from considerations of
their connection to other claims that
together might constitute a philosophical
worldview. Quinean meaning
holism undermines this aspect of analysis
just as much as it does the logical
positivists isolationist view
of verification.
4.
The Later Wittgenstein and
Ordinary-Language
Philosophy
a.
Ordinary-Language
Philosophy
Thanks to G.E. Moore, ordinary-language
analysis had had a place in the analytic
movement from the very beginning. Because
of the perceived superiority of
ideal-language analysis, however, it
dropped almost completely out of sight for
several decades. In the 1930s,
ordinary-language analysis began to make a
comeback thanks mainly to
Wittgensteinwhose views had
undergone radical changes during the
1920sbut also to a number of other
talented philosophers including John
Wisdom, John Austin (not to be confused
with the nineteenth-century John Austin
who invented legal positivism), Gilbert
Ryle, Peter Strawson and Paul Grice.
Despite differences in their reasons for
adopting the ordinary-language approach as
well as their respective manners of
employing it, these figures common
focus on ordinary language was a
substantial point of unity over against
the initially dominant ideal-language
approach.
Ordinary-language philosophy became
dominant in analytic philosophy only after
World War IIhence the dates for the
ordinary-language era given in the
Introduction are 1945-1965. Indeed, with
the exception of several articles by Ryle,
the most important texts of the
ordinary-language camp were published in
1949 and laterin some cases not
until much later, when the linguistic
approach to philosophy in all its forms
was already on its way out.
Ordinary-language philosophy is
sometimes called Oxford
philosophy. This is because Ryle,
Austin, Strawson and Grice were all Oxford
dons. They were the most important
representatives of the ordinary-language
camp after Wittgenstein (who was at
Cambridge). After Wittgenstein died
in the early years of the
ordinary-language era, they lived to
promote it through its heyday.
Despite the strong connection to
Oxford, Wittgenstein is usually taken to
be the most important of the
ordinary-language philosophers. For this
reason, we will focus only on his later
views in giving a more detailed example of
ordinary language philosophy.
b.
The Later Wittgenstein
While logical positivism was busy
crumbling under the weight of
self-referential incoherence, a larger
problem was brewing for ideal-language
philosophy in general. After publishing
the Tractatus, Wittgenstein retired
from philosophy and went to teach
grade-school in the Austrian countryside.
Why wouldnt he leave
academiaafter all, he believed he
had already lain to rest all the
traditional problems of philosophy!
During his time away from the academy,
Wittgenstein had occasion to rethink his
views about language. He concluded that,
far from being a truth-functional
calculus, language has no universally
correct structurethat is, there is
no such thing as an ideal language.
Instead, each language-systembe it a
full-fledged language, a dialect, or a
specialized technical language used by
some body of expertsis like a game
that functions according to its own
rules.
These rules are not of the sort found
in grammar booksthose are just
attempts to describe rules already found
in the practices of some linguistic
community. Real linguistic rules,
according to the later Wittgenstein,
cannot be stated, but are rather shown in
the complex intertwining of linguistic and
non-linguistic practices that make up the
form of life of any linguistic
community. Language is, for the later
Wittgenstein, an intrinsically social
phenomenon, and its correct modes are as
diverse as the many successful modes of
corporate human life. Consequently, it
cannot be studied in the abstract, apart
from its many particular embodiments in
human communities.
In contrast with his views in the
Tractatus, the later Wittgenstein
no longer believed that meaning is a
picturing-relation grounded in the
correspondence relationships between
linguistic atoms and metaphysical atoms.
Instead, language systems, or language
games, are unanalyzable wholes whose
parts (utterances sanctioned by the rules
of the language) have meaning in virtue of
having a role to playa
usewithin the total form of
life of a linguistic community. Thus it is
often said that for the latter
Wittgenstein meaning is use. On
this view, the parts of a language need
not refer or correspond to anything at
allthey only have to play a role in
a form of life.
It is important to note that even in
his later thought, Wittgenstein retained
the view that traditional philosophical
problems arise from linguistic error, and
that true philosophy is about analyzing
language so as to grasp the limits of
meaning and see that error for what it
isa headlong tumble into confusion
or meaninglessness. However, his new
understanding of language required a new
understanding of analysis. No longer could
it be the transformation of some ordinary
language statement into the symbolic
notation of formal logic purportedly
showing its true form. Instead, it is a
matter of looking at how language
is ordinarily used and seeing that
traditional philosophical problems arise
only as we depart from that use.
A philosophical problem,
says Wittgenstein, has the form:
I dont know my way
about (Wittgenstein
1953, ¶123), that is, I
dont know how to speak properly
about this, to ask a question about this,
to give an answer to that question. If I
were to transcend the rules of my language
and say something anyhow, what I say would
be meaningless nonsense. Such are the
utterances of traditional, metaphysical
philosophy. Consequently, philosophical
problems are to be solved, or rather
dissolved,
by looking into the workings
of our language, and that in such a way
as to make us recognize its workings:
The problems are solved, not by
giving new information, but by
arranging what we have always known.
(Wittgenstein 1953, ¶ 109)
And what we have always
known is the rules of our language.
The work of the philosopher,
he says, consists in assembling
reminders for a particular purpose
(Wittgenstein 1953, ¶ 127). These
reminders take the form of examples of how
the parts of language are ordinarily used
in the language game out of which the
philosoher has tried to step. Their
purpose is to coax the philosopher away
from the misuse of language essential to
the pursuit of traditional philosophical
questions. Thus the true philosophy
becomes a kind of therapy aimed at curing
a lingusitic disease that cripples
ones ability to fully engage in the
form of life of ones linguistic
community. True philsophy, Wittgenstein
says, is a battle against the
bewitchment of our intelligence by means
of language (Wittgenstein 1953,
¶ 109). The true philosophers
weapon in this battle is to bring
words back from their metaphysical to
their everyday use (Wittgenstein
1953, ¶ 116), so that the
results of philosophy are the uncovering
of one or another piece of plain nonsense
and of bumps that the understanding has
gotten by running its head up against the
limits of language (Wittgenstein
1953, ¶ 119).
Though Wittgenstein developed these new
views much earlier (mainly in the 1920s
and 30s), they were not officially
published until 1953, in the posthumous
Philosophical Investigations. Prior
to this, Wittgensteins new views
were spread largely by word of mouth among
his students and other interested
persons.
5.
The 1960s and After: The Era of
Eclecticism
a.
The Demise of Linguistic
Philosophy
By the mid-1960s the era of linguistic
philosophy was coming to a close. The
causes of its demise are variegated. For
one thing, it was by this time apparent
that there were deep divisions within the
analytic movement, especially between the
ordinary-language and ideal-language
camps, over the nature of language and
meaning on the one hand, and over how to
do philosophy on the other. Up to this
point, the core of analytic philosophy had
been the view that philosophical problems
are linguistic illusions generated by
violating the boundaries of meaning, and
that they were to be solved by clearly
marking those boundaries and then staying
within them. It was now becoming clear,
however, that this was no easy task. Far
from being the transparent phenomenon that
the early analysts had taken it to be,
linguistic meaning was turning out to be a
very puzzling phenomenon, itself in need
of deep, philosophical treatment.
Indeed, it was becoming clear that many
who had held the core analytic view about
the nature of philosophy had relied upon
different theories of meaning sometimes
implicit, never sufficiently clear, and
frequently implausible. The internal
failure of logical positivism combined
with the external criticisms of
Wittgenstein and Quine contributed to the
demise of the ideal-language approach. On
the other hand, many, including Bertrand
Russell, saw the ordinary-language
approach as falling far short of serious,
philosophical work. For this and other
reasons, the ordinary-language approach
also drew fire from outside the analytic
movement, in the form of Ernest
Gellners Words and Things
(1959) and W.C.K. Mundles
Critique of Linguistic Philosophy
(1970). The former especially had a large,
international impact, thereby contributing
to what T. P. Uschanov has called
the strange death of ordinary
language philosophy.
The waning of linguistic philosophy
signaled also the waning of attempts to
specify the proper philosophical method,
or even just the method distinctive of
analytic philosophy. Quines take on
the matterthat philosophy is
continuous with science in its aims and
methods, differing only in the generality
of its questionsproved influential
and achieved a certain level of dominance
for a time, but not to the extent that the
linguistic conception of philosophy had
during its sixty-year run. Alternatives
tied less tightly to the empirical
sciences soon emerged, with the result
that philosophical practice in
contemporary analytic philosophy is now
quite eclectic. In some circles, the
application of formal techniques is still
regarded as central to philosophical
practice, though this is now more likely
to be regarded as a means of achieving
clarity about our concepts than as a way
of analyzing language. In other circles
meticulous expression in ordinary language
is seen to provide a sufficient level of
clarity.
Partly because of Quines view of
philosophy as continuous with science
(which, of course, is divided into
specializations), and partly because
analytic philosophy had always been given
to dealing with narrowly-defined questions
in isolation from others, post-linguistic
analytic philosophy partitioned itself
into an ever-increasing number of
specialized sub-fields. What had been
linguistic philosophy metamorphosed into
what we now know as the philosophy of
language. Epistemology, the philosophy of
mind, the philosophy of science, ethics
and meta-ethics, and even metaphysics
emerged or re-emerged as areas of inquiry
not indifferent to linguistic concerns,
but not themselves intrinsically
linguistic. Over time, the list has
expanded to include aesthetics, social and
political philosophy, feminist philosophy,
the philosophy of religion, philosophy of
law, cognitive science, and the history of
philosophy.
On account of its eclecticism,
contemporary analytic philosophy defies
summary or general description. By the
same token, it encompasses far too much to
discuss in any detail here. However, two
developments in post-linguistic analytic
philosophy require special mention.
b.
The Renaissance in
Metaphysics
Metaphysics has undergone a certain
sort of renaissance in post-linguistic
analytic philosophy. Although contemporary
analytic philosophy does not readily
countenance traditional system-building
metaphysics (at least as a respected
professional activity), it has embraced
the piecemeal pursuit of metaphysical
questions so wholeheartedly that
metaphysics is now seen as one of its
three most important sub-disciplines. (The
other two are epistemology and the
philosophy of language; all three are
frequently referred to as core
analytic areas or sub-disciplines.) This
is noteworthy given analytic
philosophys traditional
anti-metaphysical orientation.
The return of metaphysics is due mainly
to the collapse of those theories of
meaning which originally had banned it as
meaningless, but later developments in the
philosophy of language also played a role.
In the 1960s, the ordinary-language
philosopher Peter Strawson began
advocating for what he called
descriptive metaphysics, a
matter of looking to the structure and
content of natural languages to illuminate
the contours of different metaphysical
worldviews or conceptual
schemes. At the same time, and
despite his naturalism and scientism which
pitted him against speculative
metaphysics, Quines holistic views
about meaning and verification opened the
door to speculative metaphysics by showing
that theory cannot be reduced to
observation even in the sciences. In the
1960s and 70s, the attempts of Donald
Davidson and others to construct a formal
theory of meaning based on Alfred
Tarskis formal definition of truth
eventually led to the development of
possible worlds semantics by David
Lewis. Consistent with the Quinean insight
that meaning is connected to holistic
worldviews or, in more metaphysical terms,
world-states, possible worlds semantics
defines important logical concepts such as
validity, soundness
and completeness, as well as concepts that
earlier logics were incapable of
handlingsuch as possibility and
necessityin terms of total
descriptions of a way that some
worlds or all worlds might be/have
been. For example, proposition p is
necessary, if p is true in all possible
worlds. Thus, despite its formalism,
possible world semantics approximates some
aspects of traditional metaphysics that
earlier analytic philosophy eschewed.
With the advent of possible worlds
semantics, attention shifted from the
notion of meaning to that of
reference. The latter has to do
explicitly with the language-world
connection, and so has an overtly
metaphysical aspect. In the 1970s,
direct reference theories came to
dominate the philosophy of language.
Developed independently by Saul Kripke and
Ruth Barcan Marcus, a direct reference
theory claims that some
wordsparticularly proper
nameshave no meaning, but simply
serve as tags (Marcus
term) or rigid designators
(Kripkes term) for the things they
name. Tagging or rigid designation is
usually spelled-out in terms of possible
worlds: it is a relation between name and
thing such that it holds in all possible
worlds. This then provides a linguistic
analog of a metaphysical theory of
identity the likes of which one finds in
traditional substance
metaphysics such as that of Aristotle.
With the restrictions characteristic of
earlier analytic philosophy removed, these
positions in the philosophy of language
made for an easy transition into
metaphysics proper.
c.
The Renaissance in History
Because analytic philosophy initially
saw itself as superseding traditional
philosophy, its tendency throughout much
of the twentieth century was to disregard
the history of philosophy. It is even
reported that a sign reading just
say no to the history of ideas once
hung on a door in the Philosophy building
at Princeton University (Grafton 2004, 2).
Though earlier analytic philosophers would
sometimes address the views of a
philosopher from previous centuries, they
frequently failed to combine philosophical
acumen with historical care, thereby
falling into faulty, anachronistic
interpretations of earlier
philosophers.
Beginning in the 1970s, some in the
analytic context began to rebel against
this anti-historical attitude. The
following remembrance by Daniel Garber
describes well the emerging historical
consciousness in the analytic context
(though this was not then and is not now
so widespread as to count as
characteristic of analytic
philosophy itself):
What my generation of
historians of philosophy was reacting
against was a bundle of practices that
characterized the writing of the
history of philosophy in the period:
the tendency to substitute rational
reconstructions of a philosophers
views for the views themselves; the
tendency to focus on an extremely
narrow group of figures (Descartes,
Spinoza, and Leibniz, Locke, Berkeley
and Hume in my period); within that
very narrow canon the tendency to focus
on just a few works at the exclusion of
others, those that best fit with our
current conception of the subject of
philosophy; the tendency to work
exclusively from translations and to
ignore secondary work that was not
originally written in English; the
tendency to treat the philosophical
positions as if they were those
presented by contemporaries, and on and
on and on. (Garber 2004, 2)
Over against this bundle of
practices, the historical movement
began to interpret the more well-known
problems and views of historical figures
in the context of, first, the wholes of
their respective bodies of work, second,
their respective intellectual contexts,
noting how their work related to that of
the preceding generation of thinkers, and,
third, the broader social environment in
which they lived and thought and
wrote.
Eventually, this new historical
approach was adopted by
philosopher-scholars interested in the
history of analytic philosophy itself. As
a result, the last two decades have seen
the emergence of the history (or
historiography) of analytic philosophy as
an increasingly important sub-discipline
within analytic philosophy itself. Major
figures in this field include Tom Baldwin,
Hans Sluga, Nicholas Griffin, Peter
Hacker, Ray Monk, Peter Hylton,
Hans-Johann Glock and Michael Beaney,
among a good many others. The surge of
interest in the history of analytic
philosophy has even drawn efforts from
philosophers better known for work in
core areas of analytic
philosophy, such as Michael
Dummett and Scott Soames.
Some of these authors are responsible
for discovering or re-discovering the fact
that neither Moore nor Russell conceived
of themselves as linguistic philosophers.
Others have been involved in the debate
over Frege mentioned in Section 2c. All
this has served to undermine received
views and to open a debate concerning the
true nature of analytic philosophy and the
full scope of its history. (For more on
this, see Preston 2004, 2005a-b).
6.
References and Further
Reading
The main divisions of this bibliography
correspond to the main divisions of the
article, which in turn correspond to the
main historical phases of analytic
philosophy. In addition, there is at the
end a section on anthologies, collections
and reference works that do not fit nicely
under the other headings.
a.
The Revolution of Moore and Russell:
Cambridge Realism and The Linguistic
Turn
Primary Sources
Moore, G. E. 1899: The Nature of
Judgment, Mind 8, 176-93.
Reprinted in Moore 1993, 1-19.
Moore, G. E. 1903a: Principia
Ethica, Cambridge: Cambridge
University Press.
Moore, G. E. 1903b: The
Refutation of Idealism Mind
12, 433-53. Reprinted in Moore 1993,
23-44.
Moore, G. E. 1925: A Defense of
Common Sense in J. H. Muirhead ed.,
Contemporary British Philosophy,
London: Allen and Unwin, 193-223.
Reprinted in Moore 1959, 126-148, and
Moore 1993, 106-33.
Moore, G. E. 1939: Proof of an
External World, Proceedings of
the British Academy 25, 273-300.
Reprinted in Moore 1993, 147-70.
Moore, G. E. 1942a: An
Autobiography, in Schilpp ed., 1942,
3-39.
Moore, G. E. 1942b: A Reply to My
Critics, in Schilpp ed., 1942,
535-677.
Moore, G. E. 1959: Philosophical
Papers, London: George Allen and
Unwin.
Moore, G. E. 1993: G.E. Moore:
Selected Writings, ed. Thomas Baldwin,
London: Routledge.
Russell, Bertrand. 1959: My
Philosophical Development, London:
George Allen and Unwin; New York: Simon
and Schuster.
Secondary Sources
Ayer, A.J. (ed ) 1971: Russell and
Moore: The Analytical Heritage,
Cambridge, MA: Harvard University
Press.
Baldwin, T. 1990: G. E. Moore,
London: Routledge.
Baldwin, T. 1991: The Identity
Theory of Truth, Mind, New
Series, Vol. 100, No. 1, 35-52.
Bell, David. 1999: The Revolution
of Moore and Russell: A Very British
Coup? in Anthony OHear (ed.),
German Philosophy Since Kant,
Cambridge and New York: Cambridge
University Press.
Griffin, Nicholas. 1991:
Russells Idealist
Apprenticeship, Oxford: Clarendon
Press.
Hylton, Peter. 1990: Russell,
Idealism, and the Emergence of Analytic
Philosophy, Oxford: Clarendon
Press.
Schilpp, P.A., ed. 1942: The
Philosophy of G.E. Moore, Library of
Living Philosophers Vol. 4, La
Salle: Open Court.
b.
Russell and the Early Wittgenstein: Ideal
Language and Logical
Atomism
Primary Sources
Frege, Gottlob. 1879: Concept
Script, a formal language of pure thought
modeled upon that of arithmetic, tr.
by S. Bauer-Mengelberg, in J. van
Heijenoort (ed.), From Frege to
Gödel: A Source Book in Mathematical
Logic, 1879-1931, Cambridge, MA:
Harvard University Press, 1967.
Frege, Gottlob. 1892: On Sense
and Reference tr. by M. Black, in
Translations from the Philosophical
Writings of Gottlob Frege, P. Geach
and M. Black (eds.), Oxford: Blackwell,
3rd ed., 1980.
Russell, Bertrand. 1905: On
Denoting, Mind 14:
479-93.
Russell, Bertrand. 1908:
Mathematical Logic as Based on the
Theory of Types, American Journal
of Mathematics, 30, 222-262. Reprinted
in Russell 1956, 59-102.
Russell, Bertrand. 1914: On
Scientific Method in Philosophy, in
Russell 1918, 97-124.
Russell, Bertrand. 1918-19: The
Philosophy of Logical Atomism,
The Monist 28:495-527 and 29:33-63,
190-222, 344-80; reprinted La Salle,
Illinois: Open Court, 1985.
Russell, Bertrand. 1918: Mysticism
and Logic: and Other Essays, New York:
Longmans, Green and Co.
Russell, Bertrand. 1944a: My
Mental Development, in Schilpp, ed.
1944, 3-20.
Russell, Bertrand. 1944b: Reply
to Criticisms, in Schilpp,
ed. 1944, 681-741.
Russell, Bertrand. 1946: The
Philosophy of Logical Analysis, from
A History of Western Philosophy,
London: Allen and Unwin; New York: Simon
and Schuster, 1946; reprinted in Dennon
and Egner, eds., 1961, pp. 301-307.
Russell, Bertrand. 1950: Is
Mathematics Purely Linguistic?, in
Russell 1973, pp. 295-306.
Russell, Bertrand. 1956: Logic and
Knowledge, Robert Marsh, ed., London:
Unwin Hyman Ltd.
Russell, Bertrand. 1959: My
Philosophical Development, London:
Unwin.
Russell, Bertrand. 1973: Essays in
Analysis, Douglas lackey, ed., London:
George Allen and Unwin Ltd.
Russell, Bertrand, and Whitehead,
Alfred North. 1910-1913: Principia
Mathematica 3 vols. London: Cambridge
University Press. Second edition 1925.
Wittgenstein, Ludwig. 1922:
Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus, tr.
C.K. Ogden. London: Routledge & Kegan
Paul.
Secondary Sources
Kenny, Anthony. 2000: Frege: An
Introduction to the Founder of Modern
Analytic Philosophy, Blackwell
Publishers.
Baker, G .P. and Hacker, P.M.S. 1983:
Dummetts Frege or Through a
Looking-Glass Darkly, Mind,
92, pp. 239-246.
Baker, G .P. and Hacker, P.M.S. 1984:
Frege: Logical Excavations, Oxford:
Blackwell.
Baker, G .P. and Hacker, P.M.S. 1987:
Dummetts Dig: Looking-Glass
Archaeology, Philosophical
Quarterly, 37, pp. 86-99.
Baker, G .P. and Hacker, P.M.S. 1989:
The Last Ditch,
Philosophical Quarterly, 39, pp.
471-477.
Dummett, Michael. 1991: Frege:
Philosophy of Mathematics, London:
Duckworth.
Monk, Ray and Palmer, Anthony (eds.).
1996: Bertrand Russell and the Origins
of Analytical Philosophy, Bristol:
Thoemmes Press.
Reck, Erich (ed.). 2001: From Frege
to Wittgenstein: Perspectives on Early
analytic philosophy, Oxford: Oxford
University Press.
Pears, D.F. 1967: Bertrand Russell
and the British Tradition in
Philosophy, London: Collins.
Schilpp, P.A. 1944: The Philosophy
of Bertrand Russell, Library
of Living Philosophers Vol. 5, La Salle:
Open Court.
Schrenmann, R. (ed.) 1967: Bertrand
Russell: Philosopher of the Century,
London: Allen and Unwin.
Tait, William (ed). 1997: Early
Analytic Philosophy: Frege, Russell,
Wittgenstein; Essays in Honor of Leonard
Linsky, Chicago: Open Court.
c.
Logical Positivism, the Vienna Circle, and
Quine
Primary Sources
Ayer, A.J. 1936: Language, Truth and
Logic, London: Gollantz; second
edition 1946; reprinted New York: Dover,
1952.
Carnap, Rudolf. 1928: The Logical
Structure of the World. English trans.
published by Berkeley: University of
California Press, 1969.
Carnap, Rudolf. 1934: On the
Character of Philosophical Problems,
tr. W.M. Malisoff, in Rorty (ed.) 1967,
54-62.
Hempel, Carl. 1950: Problems and
Changes in the Empiricist Criterion of
Meaning. Revue Internationale de
Philosophie 4:41-63; reprinted in Ayer
(ed.) 1959.
Quine, W. V. Truth by
Convention. In O.H. Lee (ed.),
Philosophical Essays for A.N.
Whitehead, New York: Longmans, 1936;
reprinted in Ways of Paradox: New
York: Random House, 1966.
Quine, W. V. 1951: Two Dogmas of
Empiricism. Philosophical
Review 60(1951):20-43.
Quine, W. V. Word and Object.
Cambridge MA: MIT Press, 1960.
Quine, W. V. Ontological Relativity
and Other Essays. New York: Columbia
University Press, 1969.
Secondary Sources
Ayer, A.J. (ed ) 1959: Logical
Positivism, Westport: Greenwood Press,
1959.
Schilpp, P.A. 1963: The Philosophy
of Rudolf Carnap, Library of Living
Philosophers, Vol. 11, La Salle: Open
Court.
Schilpp, P.A. The Philosophy of W.V.
Quine, Library of Living Philosophers,
Vol. 18, La Salle: Open Court.
Schilpp, P.A. 1992: The Philosophy of
A. J. Ayer, Library of Living
Philosophers, Vol. 21, La Salle: Open
Court.
Sarkar, Sahotra (ed.) 1996: Science
and Philosophy in the Twentieth Century:
Basic Works of Logical Empiricism, 6
vols., New York & London: Garland
Publishing.
d.
The Later Wittgenstein, et
al.: Ordinary-Language
Philosophy
Primary Sources
Austin, J.L. 1962: How to Do Things
with Words, New York: Oxford
University Press.
Austin, J.L. 1962: Sense and
Sensibilia, London: Oxford University
Press.
Grice, Paul. 1989: Studies in the
Way of Words, Cambridge MA: Harvard
University Press.
Ryle, Gilbert. 1949: The Concept of
Mind, New York: Barnes and Noble.
Ryle, Gilbert. 1953: Dilemmas,
Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Strawson, Peter. 1950: "On Referring"
Mind, 59: 320-344.
Strawson, Peter and Grice, H. P. 1956:
"In Defense of a Dogma,
Philosophical Review, 65: 141-58;
reprinted in Grice 1989.
Wisdom, John. 1931: Interpretation
and Analysis in Relation to Benthams
Theory of Definition, London: Kegan,
Paul, Trench, Trubner &Co.
Wisdom, John. 1952: Other Minds,
Oxford: Blackwell.
Wittgenstein, Ludwig. 1953:
Philosophical Investigations, tr.
G.E.M. Anscombe. Oxford: Blackwell.
Secondary Sources
Canfield, J.V. (ed) 1986: The
Philosophy of Wittgenstein, New York
and London: Garland Publishing, Inc.
Hacker, P.M.S. 1986: Insight and
Illusion: Themes in the Philosophy of
Wittgenstein, Oxford: Clarendon.
Kripke, Saul. 1982: Wittgenstein On
Rules and Private Language, Cambridge,
MA: Harvard University Press.
Urmson, J. O. 1956: Philosophical
Analysis: Its Development Between the Two
World Wars, London, Oxford, New York:
Oxford University Press.
e.
The 1960s and After: The Era of
Eclecticism
Hacking, Ian, 1975: Why Does
Language Matter to Philosophy?,
Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Kripke, Saul. 1980: Naming and
Necessity Cambridge MA: Harvard
University Press.
Mundle, C. W. K. 1970: A Critique of
Linguistic Philosophy, Oxford:
Clarendon Press.
Gellner, E. 1959: Words and Things:
A Critical Account of Linguistic
Philosophy and a Study in Ideology,
London: Gollancz.
f.
Critical and Historical Accounts of
Analytic Philosophy
Ayer, A. J., et al. 1963: The
Revolution in Philosophy, London:
Macmillan & Co. Ltd.
Ayer, A.J. (ed ) 1982: Philosophy in
the Twentieth Century, London:
Weidenfield and Nicolson.
Beaney, Michael. 2003:
Analysis, Stanford
Encyclopedia of Philosophy, URL= <
http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/analysis/>.
Biletzki and Matar (eds.). 1998: The
Story of Analytic Philosophy: Plot and
Heroes, London and New York:
Routledge.
Capaldi, Nicholas. 2000: The
Enlightenment Project in the Analytic
Conversation, Dordrecht, Boston,
London: Kluwer Academic Publishers.
Charlton, William. 1991: The
Analytic Ambition: An Introduction to
Philosophy, Oxford and Cambridge:
Blackwell.
Clarke, D.S. 1997: Philosophys
Second Revolution: Early and Recent
Analytic Philosophy, La Salle: Open
Court.
Coffa, J.A. 1991: The Semantic
Tradition from Kant to Carnap,
Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Cohen, L. J. 1986: The Dialogue of
Reason: An Analysis of Analytical
Philosophy, Oxford: Clarendon
Press.
Collingwood, R.G. An Essay on
Philosophical Method
Corrado, Michael. 1975: The Analytic
Tradition in Philosophy: Background and
Issues, Chicago: American Library
Association.
Dummett, Michael. 1993: Origins of
Analytical Philosophy, Cambridge, MA:
Harvard University Press.
Garber, Daniel. 2004: Philosophy
and the Scientific Revolution, in
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