This volume explores the thought and intellectual legacy of Wilfrid Sellars (1912-1989), one of the most influential philosophers of the twentieth century. A team of experts critically examines the groundbreaking means by which Sellars sought to integrate our thought, perception, and rational agency within a naturalistic outlook on reality.
Inhaltsverzeichnis
- Introduction
- 1: Robert B. Brandom: Sellars's Metalinguistic Expressivist Nominalism
- 2: Willem A. deVries: Images, Descriptions, and Pictures: Personhood and The Clash
- 3: Robert Kraut: Norm and Object: How Sellars Saves Metaphysics from the Pragmatist Onslaught
- 4: Rebecca Kukla and Mark Lance: Speaking and Thinking
- 5: John McDowell: A Sellarsian Blind Spot
- 6: Ruth Garrett Millikan: Confessions of a Renegade Daughter
- 7: James R. O'Shea: What To Take Away from Sellars's Kantian Naturalism
- 8: David Rosenthal: Quality Spaces, Relocation, and Grain
- 9: Johanna Seibt: How To Naturalize Sensory Consciousness and Intentionality Within A Process Monism with Normativity Gradient: A Reading of Sellars
- 10: Michael Williams: Pragmatism, Sellars, and Truth