Read more
Zusatztext Schroeder deserves congratulations for this volume. A volume of collected papers that can be profitably read as a monograph -- one, moreover, that succeeds in advancing a potentially field-defining major thesis ... is rare indeed. This is such a volume, and this reviewer hopes and expects that the ideas developed within will influence discussion for many years to come. Informationen zum Autor Mark Schroeder is the author of Slaves of the Passions (OUP, 2007), Being For: Evaluating the Semantic Program of Expressivism (OUP, 2008), Noncognitivism in Ethics (Routledge, 2010), and Explaining the Reasons We Share (OUP, 2014), as well as over fifty articles in ethics, epistemology, and the philosophy of language. His work has appeared in Ethics, Philosophical Review, Mind, Noûs, Philosophy and Phenomenological Research, Philosophers' Imprint, Oxford Studies in Metaethics, Oxford Studies in Epistemology, Philosophical Studies, and many other places. He is Professor of Philosophy at the University of Southern California. Klappentext Expressing Our Attitudes pulls together over a decade of work by Mark Schroeder, one of the leading figures in contemporary metaethics. He weaves treatments of propositions, truth, and the attitudes together within an expressivist framework. Two of the essays are new, and the introduction provides a map to reading the volume as a unified argument. Zusammenfassung Expressing Our Attitudes pulls together over a decade of work by Mark Schroeder, one of the leading figures in contemporary metaethics. He weaves treatments of propositions, truth, and the attitudes together within an expressivist framework. Two of the essays are new, and the introduction provides a map to reading the volume as a unified argument. Inhaltsverzeichnis Introduction Part 1 Expression for Expressivists Higher-Order Attitudes, Frege's Abyss, and the Truth in Propositions Part 2 Two Roles for Propositions: Cause for Divorce? How to Be an Expressivist About Truth Hard Cases for Combining Expressivism and Deflationist Truth Part 3 Hybrid Expressivism: Virtues and Vices Tempered Expressivism Part 4 Is Semantics Formal? Attitudes and Epistemics References ...