Denying Existence: The Logic, Epistemology and Pragmatics of Negative Existentials and Fictional Discourse (Synthese Library, 261)
معرفی کتاب «Denying Existence: The Logic, Epistemology and Pragmatics of Negative Existentials and Fictional Discourse (Synthese Library, 261)» نوشتهٔ Arindam Chakrabarti، منتشرشده توسط نشر Springer در سال 1997. این کتاب در فرمت djvu، زبان انگلیسی ارائه شده است.
This book tries to explore, in language as non-technical as possible, the deepest philosophical problems regarding the logical status of empty (singular) terms such as `Pegasus', `Batman', `The impossible staircase departs in Escher's painting `Ascending-Descending'+ etc., and regarding sentences which deny the existence of singled-out fictional entities. It will be fascinating for literary theorists with a flair for logic, to students of metaphysics and philosophy of language, and for historians of philosophy interested in the fate of the Russell-Meinong debate. For teachers of these aspects of analytic philosophy this will provide a textbook which goes beyond the Western tradition (without plunging into any mystical Eastern `Emptiness', which is what some previous comparative philosophers did!). Booknews From the true statement that Emma Bovary did not exist, does it follow that there was someone who did not exist? The first woman to be born in the 21st century does not yet exist, but is she as unreal as Emma Bovary? Chakrabarti (U. of Delhi) offers solutions to these and other singular existence negation problems. He suggests that the problems cannot be solved by distinguishing between full-blooded and nominal existence and that the attempt to find solutions involves us in a variety of language games. Name index only. Annotation c. by Book News, Inc., Portland, Or. Thanks to the Inlaks Foundation in India, I was able to do my doctoral research on Our Talk About Nonexistents at Oxford in the early eighties. The two greatest philosophers of that heaven of analytical philosophy - Peter Strawson and Michael Dummett - supervised my work, reading and criticising all the fledgling philosophy that I wrote during those three years. At Sir Peter's request, Gareth Evans, shortly before his death, lent me an unpublished transcript of Kripke's John Locke Lectures. Work on the Appendix about Indian Philosophy was supervised by the late Professor Bimal Krishna Matilal with whom informal but intense philosophical conversations used to spill over into dinner at his place almost every other day. It was Professor Matilal who sent me, over a summer, to study a tough Navya-Nyaya text under his own Nyaya teacher Pandit Visvabandhu Tarkatirtha at Calcutta. All four of these teachers were as kind to me as my life-long mentor in philosophy Professor Pranab Kumar Sen, whose clarity and depth remain the unreachable regu- lative ideal of my intellect. When I came back to India, my life became blissfully free of the agonising anxiety to publish, until, after a conference at Jadavpur University where I gave an impromptu paper, ironically enough, on Non-doings, I met Derek Parfit. He had a six-hour conversation with me, explicitly planning my life. Five years had already elapsed since I had finished my D. Phil, but Derek read my thesis and liked it.
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