ABSTRACT

Analytic Philosophy: An Interpretive History explores the ways interpretation (of key figures, factions, texts, etc.) shaped the analytic tradition, from Frege to Dummet. It offers readers 17 chapters, written especially for this volume by an international cast of leading scholars. Some chapters are devoted to large, thematic issues like the relationship between analytic philosophy and other philosophical traditions such as British Idealism and phenomenology, while other chapters are tied to more fine-grained topics or to individual philosophers, like Moore and Russell on philosophical method or the history of interpretations of Wittgenstein’s Tractatus. Throughout, the focus is on interpretations that are crucial to the origin, development, and persistence of the analytic tradition. The result is a more fully formed and philosophically satisfying portrait of analytic philosophy.

chapter 1|19 pages

Editor’s Introduction

Interpreting the Analytic Tradition

chapter 2|14 pages

Idealism and the Origins of Analytic Philosophy

Moore Interprets Kant and Bradley

chapter 4|18 pages

Russell, Ryle, and Phenomenology

An Alternative Parsing of the Ways

chapter 6|18 pages

Russell’s Philosophical Method

How Analytic Philosophy is Shaped By and Perpetuates Its Misinterpretation

chapter 8|13 pages

The Later Wittgenstein

chapter 10|14 pages

From Scientific to Analytic

Remarks on How Logical Positivism Became a Chapter of Analytic Philosophy

chapter 11|15 pages

Ernest Nagel’s Naturalism

A Microhistory of the American Reception of Logical Empiricism

chapter 12|18 pages

“One of my feet was still pretty firmly encased in this boot”

Behaviorism and The Concept of Mind

chapter 13|21 pages

Quine

The Last and Greatest Scientific Philosopher 1

chapter 14|15 pages

P. F. Strawson

Ordinary Language Philosophy and Descriptive Metaphysics

chapter 15|11 pages

Austin Athwart the Tradition

chapter 17|15 pages

Dummett’s Dialectics 1

chapter 18|19 pages

On the Traditionalist Conjecture