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Full Description
American pragmatism, born in the 1870s in Cambridge, Massachusetts, has as its central insight the idea that our philosophical concepts of truth, knowledge, probability, and so on must start with, and remain linked to, human experience and inquiry.
This book traces and assesses the strong influence of American pragmatism on British philosophy, with particular emphasis on Cambridge during the inter-war period, on post-war Oxford, and on recent developments. Most philosophers would say that American pragmatism received only a hostile reception in England when the ideas first travelled across the Atlantic. But this volume argues that the movement of pragmatist ideas in Britain was a strong and important current, cutting new channels to fruitful ways of thinking about philosophy's most profound problems. Its ideas have found a home in the work of Wittgenstein, Ramsey, Anscombe and, more recently, Simon Blackburn and Huw Price.
Contents
1: Cheryl Misak: Introduction
2: Cheryl Misak: Ramsey's 1929 Pragmatism
3: Anna Boncompagni: The 'Middle' Wittgenstein (and the 'Later' Ramsey) on the Pragmatist Conception of Truth
4: Hallvard Lillehammer: Smile when you're winning: how to become a Cambridge pragmatist
5: Simon Blackburn: Pragmatism: All or Some or All and Some?
6: David Bakhurst: The Spirit of Pragmatism in the Quads of Oxford
7: Ian Rumfitt: Tempered Pragmatism
8: Jane Heal: Pragmatism and Anscombe on the First Person
9: Hanjo Glock: Wittgenstein's Rain in the 'philosophical desert': Pragmatist Ideas in post-war Oxford
10: Huw Price: Concluding Remarks



