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Ideas, Concepts, and Reality

✍ Scribed by John W. Burbidge


Publisher
McGill-Queen's University Press
Year
2013
Tongue
English
Leaves
180
Series
McGill-Queen's Studies in the History of Ideas
Edition
1
Category
Library

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✦ Synopsis


Do concepts exist independently of the mind? Where does objective reality diverge from subjective experience? John Burbidge calls upon the work of some of the foremost thinkers in philosophy to address these questions, developing a nuanced account of the relationship between the mind and the external world. In Ideas, Concepts, and Reality John Burbidge adopts, as a starting point, Gottlob Frege's distinction between "ideas," which are subjective recollections of past sensations, and "concepts," which are shared by many and make communication possible. Engaging with Aristotle, Descartes, Kant, Hegel, and many others, the book argues that concepts are not eternal and unchanging, as Frege suggested, but open to revision. We can move from ideas to thoughts, Burbidge suggests, that can be refined to the point where they acquire independent and objective status as concepts. At the same time, they are radically connected to other concepts which either complement or are differentiated from them. Ideas, Concepts, and Reality offers a fresh perspective on the ways in which rigorous thought differs from other operations of the mind. Daringly inventive and accessibly written, the book will appeal to philosophers at all levels of interest.

✦ Table of Contents


Cover
McGill-Queen’s Studies in the History of Ideas
Copyright
Contents
Prologue
PART ONE - From Ideas to Concepts
1 - Frege and Psychologism
2 - From Sensations to Ideas: The Empiricists
3 - How Ideas Emerge: Hegel
4 - Language
5 - From Retentive to Mechanical Memory
6 - Thoughts and Descartes’s Rules
7 - Second Rule: Analysis and Definition
8 - Third Rule: Synthesis and Unity
9 - Fourth Rule: Comprehensiveness
10 - Conceiving
PART TWO - Tendrils of Thought
11 - Hegel’s Logic
12 - Syllogisms
13 - Modus ponens et al.
14 - Arguments from Analogy
15 - Linguistic Variations
16 - Ideas and Concepts
Epilogue
Acknowledgments
Index


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