Saul Kripke: A Criticism of Nozick’s Reliabilism.
Saul Kripke's text, Naming and Necessity (1981), has had a decisive influence on contemporary philosophy of language, metaphysics and the philosophy of the mind. Kripke's argument in Naming and Necessity is philosophy at it’s best.
In 1970, Saul Kripke, who is also an analytic philosopher, pointed out that despite all the progress made in following Frege’s emphasis on logic, language and meaning, there are certain limitations of that project that we must transcend. Kripke’s central message emerges from a discussion of three distinctions.
Originally published in 1982, Saul Kripke's Rules and Private Language has become a classic in contemporary analytic philosophy and probably the most notable (if contentious) analysis of Wittgenstein's later work.
Philosophy Saul Kripke Naming And Necessity Philosophy Essay.. In 'Naming and Necessity' Saul Kripke argues against type-type-identity theory by the use of a disagreement from idea of dialect. Kripke wants to show that if one is convinced in the individuality of mental- and brain state governments, one must allow the theory's full effect.
Philosophy of Language (eBook) by P F. Strawson, Keith Donnellan, Ruth Millikan, Stephen Neale, W V. Quine, Gareth Evans, John McDowell, Hilary Putnam, Alfred Tarski.
A rigid designator designates the same object in all possible worlds in which that object exists and never designates anything else. This technical concept in the philosophy of language has critical consequences felt throughout philosophy. In their fullest generality, the consequences are metaphysical and epistemological.
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