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Series Editors' Preface; Preface; Acknowledgements; Contents; Editors and Contributors; List of Figures; Introduction ; 1 Beaney, Soames and Rorty on Methodology in the History of Philosophy; 2 Methodological Pluralism; 3 The Essays in This Volume; References; Part I Aspects of Analytic Philosophy; The Rise of 'Analytic Philosophy': When and How Did People Begin Calling Themselves 'Analytic Philosophers'? ; 1 Introduction; 2 Motivations; 3 When?; Google Books Data; Setting the Boundaries: Nagel's Article, the First Textbook, and Anthologies; Objections and Replies ... and Complications
4 Contemporaneous Justifications for the GroupingNagel's Justifications; Second-Phase, Mid-Century Justifications; 5 Resistance to the Grouping; Early Cambridge Analysts Explicitly Rejected the Second-Phase Justification for the Grouping; Why 'Analytic Philosophy' Did not Gain Widespread Currency Until the 1950s; Why Did the British Eventually Accept the 'Second Phase,' Linguistic Accounts of Philosophy?; 6 Contrast Class(es) of 'Analytic Philosophy'; 'Continental Philosophy'; Earlier Contrast Classes; 7 Conclusion; References
The Dissonant Origins of Analytic Philosophy: Common Sense in Philosophical Methodology 1 Introduction; 2 Current Debates on Philosophical Methodology; 3 Moore and Russell; Early Stages; Kinds of Analysis; Analysandum; Conservative vs Transformative/Revisionary Analysis; 4 Carnap and Strawson; Explication; Ordinary Language Philosophy; Strawson's Critique of Carnapian Explication, and Possible Replies; 5 Conclusion; References; Part II Logic and Language; Russell's Method of Analysis and the Axioms of Mathematics ; 1 Mathematical Axioms and the Logocentric Predicament
2 Early Logicism and the Methods of Science: Jevons and Venn3 Russell's Regressive Method and Immanent Logicism; References; Wittgenstein on Representability and Possibility ; 1 Introduction; 2 Realism and the Name-Object Identity of Form; Introduction; Formal Identity as a Precondition on Reference; Syntax as Deriving from the Referent; An Improved Derivation Idea; 3 Facts as Sayables and Propositions as Sayings; Introduction; The Common Core; 'Our Language Game of Propositions'; Sayings, Sayables and Truth; References; The History and Prehistory of Natural-Language Semantics
1 Truth-Conditional Semantics and the Communicative Turn2 The Truth-Conditional Idealization; 3 The Pivot; References; Part III Ontology and Mind; Brentano's Concept of Mind: Underlying Nature, Reference-Fixing, and the Mark of the Mental ; 1 Introduction; 2 Intentionality as the Mark of the Mental: Problems with the Orthodox Interpretation; 3 The Concept of Mind: Reference-Fixing and Underlying Nature; 4 Intentionality as the Underlying Nature of Mentality; Marks of the Mental and the Classification of Mental Phenomena; Objections and Replies; 5 Inner-Perceivability as Reference-Fixer
4 Contemporaneous Justifications for the GroupingNagel's Justifications; Second-Phase, Mid-Century Justifications; 5 Resistance to the Grouping; Early Cambridge Analysts Explicitly Rejected the Second-Phase Justification for the Grouping; Why 'Analytic Philosophy' Did not Gain Widespread Currency Until the 1950s; Why Did the British Eventually Accept the 'Second Phase,' Linguistic Accounts of Philosophy?; 6 Contrast Class(es) of 'Analytic Philosophy'; 'Continental Philosophy'; Earlier Contrast Classes; 7 Conclusion; References
The Dissonant Origins of Analytic Philosophy: Common Sense in Philosophical Methodology 1 Introduction; 2 Current Debates on Philosophical Methodology; 3 Moore and Russell; Early Stages; Kinds of Analysis; Analysandum; Conservative vs Transformative/Revisionary Analysis; 4 Carnap and Strawson; Explication; Ordinary Language Philosophy; Strawson's Critique of Carnapian Explication, and Possible Replies; 5 Conclusion; References; Part II Logic and Language; Russell's Method of Analysis and the Axioms of Mathematics ; 1 Mathematical Axioms and the Logocentric Predicament
2 Early Logicism and the Methods of Science: Jevons and Venn3 Russell's Regressive Method and Immanent Logicism; References; Wittgenstein on Representability and Possibility ; 1 Introduction; 2 Realism and the Name-Object Identity of Form; Introduction; Formal Identity as a Precondition on Reference; Syntax as Deriving from the Referent; An Improved Derivation Idea; 3 Facts as Sayables and Propositions as Sayings; Introduction; The Common Core; 'Our Language Game of Propositions'; Sayings, Sayables and Truth; References; The History and Prehistory of Natural-Language Semantics
1 Truth-Conditional Semantics and the Communicative Turn2 The Truth-Conditional Idealization; 3 The Pivot; References; Part III Ontology and Mind; Brentano's Concept of Mind: Underlying Nature, Reference-Fixing, and the Mark of the Mental ; 1 Introduction; 2 Intentionality as the Mark of the Mental: Problems with the Orthodox Interpretation; 3 The Concept of Mind: Reference-Fixing and Underlying Nature; 4 Intentionality as the Underlying Nature of Mentality; Marks of the Mental and the Classification of Mental Phenomena; Objections and Replies; 5 Inner-Perceivability as Reference-Fixer