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This volume's four thematic sections seek to apply inferentialism to a number of core issues, including the nature of meaning and content, reconstructing semantics, rule-oriented models and explanations of social practices and inferentialism's historical influence and dialogue with other philosophical traditions.
Inhaltsverzeichnis
Introduction: Inferentialism's Years of Travel and Its Logico-Philosophical Calling
Ladislav Kore¿ and Vojt¿ch Kolman Part I: Language and Meaning 1. Grounding Assertion and Acceptance in Mental Imagery
Christopher Gauker 2. Semantics: Why Rules Ought to Matter
Hans-Johann Glock 3. Quine Peregrinating: Norms, Dispositions, and Analyticity
Gary Kemp 4. Let's Admit Defeat: Assertion, Denial, and Retraction
Bernhard Weiss Part II: Logic and Semantics 5. Inferentialism, Structure, and Conservativeness
Ole Hjortland and Shawn Standefer 6. From Logical Expressivism to Expressivist Logics: Sketch of a Program and Some Implementations
Robert Brandom 7. Inferentialist-Expressivism for Explanatory Vocabulary
Jared Millson, Kareem Khalifa, and Mark Risjord 8. Logical Expressivism and Logical Relations
Lionel Shapiro 9. Propositional Contents and the Logical Space
Ladislav Kore¿ 10. Assertion, Inference, and the Conditional
Peter Milne Part III: Rules, Agency, and Explanation 11. Natural Cultural Inferentialism
Joseph Rouse 12. Inferentialism: Where Do We Go from Here?
Jaroslav Peregrin 13. The Nature and Diversity of Rules
Vladimír Svoboda 14. Governed by Rules, or Subjects to Rules?
Ond¿ej Beran Part IV: History and Present 15. Inferentialism after Kant
Danielle Macbeth 16. Inferentialism, Naturalism, and the Ought-To-Be's of Perceptual Cognition
James O'Shea 17. Inferentialism and Its Mathematical Precursor
Vojt¿ch Kolman 18. Inferentialism and the Reception of Testimony
Leila Haaparanta
Über den Autor / die Autorin
Ondřej Beran is a researcher, currently based at the Centre for Ethics (University of Pardubice). His publications, ongoing work, and areas of research interest include the philosophy of language, ethics, the philosophy of religion, and feminist philosophy. He has also translated some of Wittgenstein's works into Czech
Vojtěch Kolman is Associate Professor of Logic at the Faculty of Arts, Charles University in Prague. His research focuses mainly on themes from the philosophy of mathematics, the history of logic, pragmatism, and the philosophy of the arts. He is author of the book
Zahlen and numerous articles in international journals (
Synthese, Erkenntnis, Hegel-Bulletin, Allgemeine Zeitschrift für Philosophie and others).
Ladislav Koreň is the Chair of the Department of Philosophy and Social Sciences at the University of Hradec Králové and a researcher at the Czech Academy of Sciences. His areas of interest include epistemology, philosophy of language, philosophy of logic, philosophy of mind, and philosophy of social sciences. His publications include research articles in international journals (
Synthese, Journal of Social Ontology) and
Volumes (Routledge).
Zusammenfassung
This volume's four thematic sections seek to apply inferentialism to a number of core issues, including the nature of meaning and content, reconstructing semantics, rule-oriented models and explanations of social practices and inferentialism’s historical influence and dialogue with other philosophical traditions.
Zusatztext
"This volume provides a timely update on [inferentialism] . . . There is clearly a research program here, one whose participants work closely with related areas in philosophical logic, the philosophy of language, the philosophy of mind, the life sciences, the philosophy of perception, the philosophy of testimony, and the history of philosophy. It will be valuable for those who are either working in these areas, working at the boundaries of these and related areas, or are interested in a state-of-the-art overview of inferentialism as a strand of research that grows out of certain trends in 19th and 20th century European and North American philosophy." – Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews