ABSTRACT

Reissuing works originally published between 1915 and 1990, this Routledge Library Edition collection offers a selection of scholarship on this important area of philosophy. Classic previously out-of-print works are brought back into print here in this small set, which includes volumes on scepticism, truth, experience, empirical justification, objectivity and other issues surrounding the problem of knowledge.

chapter |11 pages

INTRODUCTION

chapter II|31 pages

THE REFUTATION OF PROTAGORAS

chapter III|30 pages

THE REFUTATION OF HERACLEITUS

chapter V|93 pages

FALSE BELIEF

chapter VI|46 pages

KNOWLEDGE AS TRUE BELIEF PLUS LOGOS

chapter |29 pages

FOOTNOTES

chapter |2 pages

BIBLIOGRAPHY

chapter |1 pages

Cover

chapter |2 pages

Half Title

chapter |1 pages

Title Page

chapter |1 pages

Copyright Page

chapter |1 pages

Original Title Page

chapter |2 pages

Original Copyright Page

chapter |1 pages

Dedication

chapter |2 pages

Table of Contents

chapter |4 pages

INTRODUCTION

chapter |4 pages

ABSTRACT

chapter I|20 pages

THE A PRIORI DEADLOCK

chapter II|18 pages

PERSONAL PRONOUNS A

chapter III|24 pages

PERSONAL PRONOUNS B

chapter IV|8 pages

PRIVATE LANGUAGE

chapter V|12 pages

EPISTEMOLOGY A

chapter VI|18 pages

EPISTEMOLOGY B

chapter VII|14 pages

SELF-ASCRIPTION AND OTHER ASCRIPTION

chapter |2 pages

SELECTED BIBLIOGRAPHY

chapter |1 pages

Cover

chapter |2 pages

Half Title

chapter |1 pages

Title Page

chapter |1 pages

Copyright Page

chapter |1 pages

Original Title Page

chapter |1 pages

Original Copyright Page

chapter |2 pages

Table of Contents

chapter |2 pages

Preface

chapter 2|6 pages

On the Analysis of Causality

chapter 3|8 pages

Causation: Perceivable? Or only Inferred?

chapter 4|7 pages

Concerning the Uniformity of Causality

chapter 5|6 pages

Explanation, Mechanism, and Teleology

chapter 6|19 pages

On the Attributes of Material Things

chapter 7|12 pages

'Substants', Capacities, and Tendencies

chapter 8|17 pages

Symbols, Signs, and Signals

chapter 10|18 pages

A Liberalistic View of Truth

chapter 12|13 pages

Propositions, Opinions, Sentences, and Facts

chapter 13|26 pages

Moore's 'The Refutation of ldealism'

chapter 14|20 pages

Philosophy and Natural Science

chapter 15|18 pages

The Method of Knowledge in Philosophy

chapter |1 pages

Cover

chapter |2 pages

Half Title

chapter |1 pages

Title Page

chapter |1 pages

Copyright Page

chapter |1 pages

Original Title Page

chapter |1 pages

Original Copyright Page

chapter |2 pages

Table of Contents

chapter |2 pages

Foreword

chapter |28 pages

Introduction: Hobbes and the Modern Mind

chapter |112 pages

PART II PHILOSOPHICAL PERSPECTIVES

chapter |30 pages

EPILOGUE

chapter |9 pages

Index

chapter |1 pages

Cover

chapter |2 pages

Half Title

chapter |1 pages

Title

chapter |1 pages

Copyright

chapter |1 pages

Original Title

chapter |9 pages

Original Copyright

chapter |2 pages

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

chapter |2 pages

Contents

chapter I|14 pages

SKEPTICISM AND EPISTEMOLOGY

chapter II|24 pages

THE WARRANTED-TRUE-BELIEF CONCEPTION

chapter III|30 pages

HYPOTHETIC INFERENCE

chapter IV|29 pages

PSYCHOLOGICAL CONCEPTS

chapter V|26 pages

SENSE DATA

chapter VI|25 pages

THE DEFINITION OF KNOWLEDGE

chapter VII|18 pages

THE POSSIBILITY OF SKEPTICISM

chapter |2 pages

BIBLIOGRAPHY

chapter |1 pages

Cover

chapter |2 pages

Half Title

chapter |1 pages

Title Page

chapter |1 pages

Copyright Page

chapter |1 pages

Original Title Page

chapter |1 pages

Original Copyright Page

chapter |4 pages

Dedication

chapter |2 pages

Table of Chapters

chapter |10 pages

Table of Contents

chapter |10 pages

Introduction

chapter |356 pages

PART I: THE PROBLEM OF IMMEDIATE KNOWLEDGE

chapter |130 pages

PART II. THE PBOBLEM OF MEDIATE KNOWLEDGE

chapter |4 pages

INDEX OF AUTHORS

chapter |3 pages

INDEX OF SUBJECTS

chapter |1 pages

Cover

chapter |2 pages

Half Title

chapter |1 pages

Title Page

chapter |1 pages

Copyright Page

chapter |1 pages

Original Title Page

chapter |1 pages

Original Copyright Page

chapter |2 pages

Dedication

chapter |4 pages

PREFACE

chapter |2 pages

Table of Contents

chapter II|39 pages

FIRST-ORDER LANGUAGES

chapter III|29 pages

FIRST-ORDER SYNTAX

chapter IV|16 pages

MULTIPLE DENOTATION: FIRST-ORDER SEMANTICS

chapter V|28 pages

TRUTH, ADEQUACY, AND CONSISTENCY

chapter VI|22 pages

SET THEORY AND THEORY OF TYPES

chapter VII|14 pages

SATISFACTION, DESIGNATION, DETERMINATION

chapter VIII|12 pages

NON-TRANSLATIONAL SEMANTICS (I)

chapter IX|22 pages

NON-TRANSLATIONAL SEMANTICS (II)

chapter X|14 pages

INDIVIDUAL AND FUNCTIONAL CONSTANTS

chapter XI|27 pages

INSCRIPTIONS AND MULTIPLE DENOTATION

chapter XII|9 pages

INSCRIPTIONS AND COMPREHENSION

chapter XIII|33 pages

FIRST-ORDER CONSTRUCTIVISM

chapter |9 pages

INDICES

chapter |1 pages

Cover

chapter |2 pages

Half Title

chapter |1 pages

Title Page

chapter |1 pages

Copyright Page

chapter |1 pages

Original Title Page

chapter |1 pages

Original Copyright Page

chapter |4 pages

Table of Contents

chapter |2 pages

FOREWORD

chapter II|25 pages

THE PSYCHOLOGICAL POSSIBILITY OF SCEPTICISM

chapter III|14 pages

SCEPTICISM AND POSITIVE MENTAL HEALTH

chapter |5 pages

BIBLIOGRAPHY

chapter |3 pages

INDEX

chapter |1 pages

Cover

chapter |2 pages

Half Title

chapter |1 pages

Title Page

chapter |1 pages

Copyright Page

chapter |1 pages

Original Title Page

chapter |1 pages

Original Copyright Page

chapter |2 pages

Table of Contents

chapter |2 pages

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

chapter |2 pages

INTRODUCTION

chapter 2|23 pages

THE TWO FACES OF OBJECTIVITY

chapter 3|23 pages

A ROLE FOR OBSERVATION

chapter 4|23 pages

CERTAINTY AND HUMAN ACTION: WITTGENSTEIN

chapter 5|16 pages

REASON AND PARTICULAR CASES: JOHN WISDOM

chapter 6|14 pages

RATIONALITY, RELATIVISM AND OBJECTIVENESS

chapter |8 pages

NOTES

chapter |2 pages

INDEX

chapter |1 pages

Cover

chapter |2 pages

Half Title

chapter |1 pages

Title Page

chapter |1 pages

Copyright Page

chapter |1 pages

Original Title Page

chapter |1 pages

Original Copyright Page

chapter |2 pages

Tabel of Contents

chapter |2 pages

Acknowledgements

chapter |12 pages

PRELUDE

chapter |34 pages

PART ONE: THE SCIENTIST AS KNOWER

chapter |50 pages

PART TWO: HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVES

chapter |92 pages

PART THREE: THE KNOWLEDGE OF SOCIETY

chapter |52 pages

PART FOUR: THE KNOWLEDGE OF LIVING THINGS

chapter |10 pages

Bibliography

chapter |1 pages

Cover

chapter |2 pages

Half Title

chapter |1 pages

Title Page

chapter |1 pages

Copyright Page

chapter |1 pages

Original Title Page

chapter |1 pages

Original Copyright Page

chapter |4 pages

PREFACE

chapter |2 pages

Table of Contents

chapter |20 pages

INTRODUCTION

chapter |94 pages

PART TWO: KNOWLEDGE AND RELIGION

chapter |38 pages

PART THREE: MORAL KNOWLEDGE

chapter |52 pages

PART FOUR: PERSONAL KNOWLEDGE

chapter |3 pages

INDEX

chapter |1 pages

Cover

chapter |2 pages

Half Title

chapter |1 pages

Title

chapter |1 pages

Copyright

chapter |1 pages

Original Title

chapter |1 pages

Original Copyright

chapter |2 pages

PREFACE

chapter |4 pages

Contents

chapter 1|11 pages

THE GIVEN IN MODERN PHILOSOPHY

chapter 2|13 pages

THE NAIVE VIEW

chapter 3|20 pages

THE GIVEN AS SENSE-DATA

chapter 4|26 pages

THE GIVEN AS OBJECTS

chapter 5|15 pages

THE GIVEN AS IMMEDIATE EXPERIENCE

chapter 6|19 pages

PROBLEM OR PSEUDO-PROBLEM

chapter 7|10 pages

MAKING OR FINDING THE FACTS

chapter 8|13 pages

THOUGHT AND COGNITION

chapter 9|21 pages

THE REAL ISSUE

chapter 12|24 pages

COMMOM SENSE AND RIVAL ONTOLOGIES

chapter |6 pages

INDEX

chapter |1 pages

Cover

chapter |2 pages

Half Title

chapter |1 pages

Title

chapter |1 pages

Copyright

chapter |1 pages

Original Title

chapter |1 pages

Original Copyright

chapter |51 pages

Preface

chapter |3 pages

Preface References

chapter |2 pages

Acknowledgements

chapter |6 pages

Contents

chapter I|17 pages

Introduction

chapter III|36 pages

Foundationalism

chapter IV|12 pages

Our Cognitive Mechanism

chapter V|39 pages

Infallibility and Reliability

chapter VI|11 pages

More About Our Cognitive Mechanism

chapter VII|16 pages

justification

chapter VIII|36 pages

Justification

chapter X|8 pages

Conclusion

chapter |1 pages

Cover

chapter |2 pages

Half Title

chapter |1 pages

Title

chapter |1 pages

Copyright

chapter |1 pages

Original Title

chapter |1 pages

Original Copyright

chapter |6 pages

Preface

chapter |2 pages

Contents

chapter I|11 pages

INTRODUCTORY

chapter II|19 pages

THE ELEMENTS OF SENSATION. THE OUTER SENSES

chapter III|15 pages

THE INNER SENSES

chapter IV|9 pages

THE HIGHER SENSES—HEARING

chapter VI|10 pages

SENSATIONS IN GENERAL

chapter VIII|7 pages

PROPORTION

chapter IX|8 pages

TIME

chapter X|7 pages

ILLUSORY MODIFICATIONS OF FORM

chapter XI|11 pages

MOTION

chapter XII|13 pages

BINAURAL POSITION

chapter XIII|8 pages

THE THIRD DIMENSION OF VISUAL POSITION

chapter XIV|10 pages

STEREOSCOPIC VISION

chapter XV|8 pages

SINGLE SENSE INTEGRATIONS IN GENERAL

chapter XVI|9 pages

MIND AND ACTION

chapter XVII|10 pages

THE GENERAL SCHEME OF APPETITIVE ACTION

chapter XVIII|9 pages

SENSORY SPACE IN GENERAL

chapter XIX|8 pages

APPARENT SIZE

chapter XX|16 pages

PERCEPTION A SPATIAL FRAGMENT

chapter XXI|8 pages

RECOGNITION

chapter XXII|12 pages

CONCEPTION

chapter XXIII|11 pages

CONCLUSION

chapter |3 pages

INDEX

chapter |1 pages

Cover

chapter |2 pages

Half Title

chapter |1 pages

Title

chapter |1 pages

Copyright

chapter |1 pages

Original Title

chapter |1 pages

Original Copyright

chapter |2 pages

Preface

chapter |2 pages

Contents

chapter I|20 pages

The Knowledge-Situation

chapter II|24 pages

Sensory Knowledge

chapter III|17 pages

The Perception of "Things"

chapter IV|18 pages

Perceptual Memory

chapter V|15 pages

Introspective Knowledge

chapter VI|27 pages

Knowledge of Other Selves

chapter VII|14 pages

Conceptual Knowledge

chapter VIII|40 pages

Categorial Knowledge

chapter IX|27 pages

Formal Knowledge

chapter X|24 pages

Valuational Knowledge

chapter XI|22 pages

Knowledge, Meaning, and Truth

chapter |7 pages

Index

chapter |2 pages

Half Title

chapter |1 pages

Title Page

chapter |3 pages

Copyright Page

chapter |2 pages

Contents

chapter |2 pages

Preface

chapter 1|26 pages

Introductory

chapter 2|19 pages

Memory

chapter 3|14 pages

Memory (continued)

chapter 4|31 pages

Universals

chapter 5|26 pages

Judgment

chapter 6|25 pages

Truth as Correspondence

chapter 7|20 pages

Truth as Coherence, and Truth as Fact

chapter 8|19 pages

Knowing and Believing