ABSTRACT
This collection, with contributions from leading philosophers, places analytic philosophy in a broader context comparing it with the methodology of its most important rival tradition in twentieth-century philosophy--phenomenology, whose development parallels the development of analytic philosophy in many ways. The Analytic Turn will be of great interest to historians of philosophy generally, analytic philosophers, and phenomenologists.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
part |2 pages
Part I Frege and Russell: decompositional and transformative analysis
part |2 pages
Part II Wittgenstein and other philosophers: connective and explicatory analysis
part |2 pages
Part III Bolzano and Husserl: semantic, conceptual and phenomenological analysis