PHI Volume 30 Issue 12 Front Matter

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

PHI Volume 30 Issue 12 Front Matter JOURNAL OF PHILOSOPHICAL STUDIES Downloaded from https://www.cambridge.org/core. 29 Sep 2021 at 23:15:44, subject to the Cambridge Core terms of use. JOURNAL OF PHILOSOPHICAL STUDIES EDITED BY SYDNEY E. HOOPER WITH THE ASSISTANCE OF WILLIAM BROWN JULIAN S. HUXLEY J. H. MUIRHEAD M. GINSBERG F. B. JEVONS BERTRAND RUSSELL G. DAWES HICKS HAROLD J. LASKI G. F. STOUT L. T. HOBHOUSE A. D. LINDSAY A. E. TAYLOR J. ARTHUR THOMSON CLEMENT C. J. WEBB VOL. III.—1928 LONDON: MACMILLAN & CO., LIMITED, ST. MARTIN'S STREET, W.C. 2 1928 Downloaded from https://www.cambridge.org/core. 29 Sep 2021 at 23:15:44, subject to the Cambridge Core terms of use. PRINTED IN GREAT BRITAIN BY UNWIN BROTHERS, LIMITED LONDON AND W O K I K O- Downloaded from https://www.cambridge.org/core. 29 Sep 2021 at 23:15:44, subject to the Cambridge Core terms of use. CONTENTS OF VOLUME III ARTICLES. PAGE ALEXANDER, S.—Morality as an Art -- 143 BARTLETT, F. C.—Types of Imagination 78 BROAD, C. D.—Analysis of Some Ethical Concepts ----- 285 BURNS, C. DELISLE.—The Conception of Liberty 186 The Philosophy of Social Life ----- 483 CALKINS, MARY WHITON.—Value—Primarily a Psychological Conception - 413 - CHAPMAN, H. WALLIS.—Behaviourism: A Logical Study - - - - 65 5, JCOLLINGWOOD, R. G.—The Limits of Historical Knowledge - - - 213 £ ^DICKINSON, G. LOWES.—On the Discovery of Good—a Dialogue - - 279 * "DREVER, JAMES.—Meaning 71 "{ FIELD, G. C.—Some Modern Proofs of the Existence of God - - - 324 : GARVIE, ALFRED E.—Ethics, Psychology, and Sociology - - - - 457 i GIBSON, W. R. BOYCE.—The Philosophy of Melchior Palagyi—I - - 15 i „ „ The Philosophy of Melchior Palagyi—II - - 158 \ HICKS, G. DAWES.—The Philosophy of a Business Man - 49 » „ „ A Century of Philosophy at University College, ,. London -------- 468 ' JOAD, C. E. M.—Philosophy and Life ------- 349 ,, „ The Non-Existence of Matter 495 * JOSEPH, H. W. B.—Logic and Mathematics ..---- 3 " LAIRD, JOHN.—The Ethics of Communism ------ 198 MCDOUGALL, WILLIAM.—The Confusion of the Concept ... - 427 MANCHESTER, THE BISHOP OF.—The Value of Philosophy to Religion - 345 MURE, G. R. G.—The Marriage of Universals—I ----- 313 „ ,, The Marriage of Universals—II ----- 443 NEEDHAM, JOSEPH (M.A.).—Organicism in Biology ----- 29 PERRY, R. B.—Peace without Victory—in Philosophy - ... 300 REID, L. ARNAUD.—Instinct and Moral Life ------ 173 TURNER, J. E.—The Problem of Value 41 PHILOSOPHICAL SURVEYS. PHILOSOPHY IN FRANCE.—Stanley Keeling 357 PHILOSOPHY IN GERMANY.—Helen Knight 86 Helen Knight 361 PHILOSOPHY IN ITALY.—Guido de Ruggiero 223 GuidGid o de RuggierRi o PHILOSOPHICAL CURRENTS ON THE PACIFIC COAST.—J. H. Muirhead - - 505 PHILOSOPHY IN RUSSIA.—Natalie A. Duddington 227 ,, ,, ,, Natalie A. Duddington 516 NEW BOOKS. ADLER, M." J.—Dialectic (L. S. Stebbing) 236 ALEXANDER, S.—Art and Instinct (R. G. Collingwood) .... 370 „ ,, Artistic Creation and Cosmic Creation (H. M. Smith) - 546 V Downloaded from https://www.cambridge.org/core. 29 Sep 2021 at 23:15:44, subject to the Cambridge Core terms of use. CONTENTS PAGE BARRY, F.—The Scientific Habit of Thought (L. S. Stebbing) - - - 542 BARTLETT, F. C.—Psychology and the Soldier (F. Ayeling) - 247 BLOOR, C.—Temperament: A Survey of Psychological Theories (F. Aveling) 557 BOGOSLOVSKY, B. B.—The Technique of Controversy : Principles of Dynamic Logic (L. S. Stebbing) ......... 542 BOREL, EMILE Space and Time (L. S. Stebbing) ----- 96 BRADLEY, F. H.—Ethical Studies (John Laird) ------ 235 BRIDGMAN, P. W.—The Logic of Modern Physics (L. S. Stebbing) - - 96 BRIFFAULT, R.—The Mothers (W. J. Perry) 392 BRIGHTMAN, EDGAR SHEFFIELD (Editor).—Proceedings of the Sixth Inter- rtf*national Congress of Philosophy (J. S. Mackenzie) - - - - in BUCHANAN, SCOTT.—Possibility (L. S. Stebbing) 236 BURKE, R. B. (Translator).—The Opus Majus of Roger Bacon (L. J. Russell) 387 BURROW, T.—The Social Basis of Consciousness (F. A. Hampton) - - 390 CARR, H. WILDON.—The Unique Status of Man (T. E. Jessop) ... 374 DAHLKE, PAUL.—Buddhism and its Place in the Mental Life of Mankind (F. C. M. Wei) 112 DE RUGGIERO, G.—The History of European Liberalism (J. A. Hobson) - 378 EVANS, J.—Theistic Monism (C. C. J. Webb) 548 FARNEIX, L. R.—Hedonism and Art (R. G. Collingwood) - ... 547 FLOWER, J. C.—An Approach to the Psychology of Religion (R. H. Thonless) 249 Fox, C.—Practical Psychology for Students of Education (C. Burt) - - 395 GARNETT, A. C.—Instinct and Personality (C. A. Mace) - 396 GILBERT, KATHERINE.—Studies in Recent /Esthetic (Helen Knight) - - 258 GORDON, R. G.—The Neurotic Personality (M. D. Eder) - 255 GORE, C.—Christ and Society (E. S. Waterhouse) 559 HARRIS, C. R. S.—Duns Scoius (D. E. Sharp) 102 HART, BERNARD.—Psychopathology : Its Development and its Place in Medi- cine (H. Crichton-Miller) - - - - - - - - - 118 HART, JOSEPH K.—Inside Experience (J. J. Findlay) . - 116 HOBHOUSE L. T.—Development and Purpose (C. Lloyd Morgan) - - 99 HOCKING, W. E.—The Self: Its Body and Freedom (John Laird) - - 559 HSIAO, KUNG CHUAN.—Political Pluralism (C. Delisle Burns) - 243 ISBYAM, I. C.—Metaphysics and Modern Research (John Laird) - - 241 JEANS, J. H.—Astronomy and Cosmogony (C. P. Sanger) ... 533 JOAD, C. E. M.—The Future of Life : A Theory of Vitalism (J. E. Turner) 383 JONES, OLIN MCKENDREE.—Empiricism and Intuitionism in Reid's Common Sense Philosophy (John Laird) - 239 JOSEY, CHARLES CONANT.—The Psychology of Religion (E. S. Waterhouse) - 109 KNUDSON, ALBERT C.—The Philosophy of Personalism: A Study in the Metaphysics of Religion (E. S. Waterhouse) 107 LANE, H.—Talks to Parents and Teachers (C. A. Mace) ... - 397 LOSSKY, N. O.—The World as an Organic Whole (C. Lloyd Morgan) - - 530 MACCURDY, J. T.—Common Principles in Psychology and Physiology (J. Drever) 550 MCDOUGALL, W.—Character and the Conduct of Life (J. Drever) - - 390 MCTAGGART, J. M. E.—The Nature of Existence (S. V. Keeling) - - 519 MAITRA, SUSHIL KUMAR.—The Ethics of the Hindus (W. Stede) - - 116 MALINOWSKI, BRONISLAW.—Sex and Repression in Savage Society (J. C. F.) - 119 MARKEY, J. F.—The Symbolic Process and its Integration in Children (E. M. Whetnall) 554 MATHESON, P. E.—The Life of Hastings Rashdall (A. H. Smith) - - 558 MITCHELL, T. W.—Problems of Psychopathology (Gordon, R. G.) - - 122 MUCHISON, CARL (Edited by).—Psychologies of ig2$ (R. H. Thouless) - 249 PAVLOV, I. P.—Conditioned Reflexes (William Brown) ... - 380 PIAGET, J.—Judgment and Reasoning in the Child (B. Edgell) - 551 PIERON, HENRI.—Thought and the Brain (Translated by C. K. Ogden) (F. C. Bartlett) 114 RABAUD, E.—How Animals Find their Way About (W. J. Dakin) - - 556 ROBACK, A. A.—The Psychology of Character. With a Survey of Tempera- ment (James Drever) ----- 123 ROGERS, A. K.—Morals in Review (L. S. S.) - - - - - - 388 RUSSELL, BERTRAND.—The Analysis of Matter (A. S. Eddington) - - 93 „ „ An Outline of Philosophy (L. J. Russell) - - 231 SCHOEN, MAX.—The Effects of Music (Agnes SaviU) ----- 244 SMITH, HENRY BRADFORD.—Symbolic Logic (L. J. Russell) - - 246 vi Downloaded from https://www.cambridge.org/core. 29 Sep 2021 at 23:15:44, subject to the Cambridge Core terms of use. CONTENTS PAGE SNEATH, E. HERSHEY (Editor).—The Evolution of Ethics as Revealed in the Great Religions (Alfred E. Garvie) - - 109 STEVANOVIC, B. P.—Experimental Study of the Mental Processes Involved in Judgment (Beatrice Edgell) - - - - - - - - 251 STURT, H.—Moral Experience: An Outline of Ethics for Class Teaching (John Laird) 385 TAYLOR, A. E.—A Commentary on Plato's "Timaus" (G. C. Field) - - 373 ,, ,, David Hume and the Miraculous (S. V. Keeling) - - 535 TENNANT, F. R.—Philosophical Theology (W. G. de Burgh) - - - 537 THOMAS, E. E.—The Ethical Basis of Reality (John Laird) ... 106 TURNER, D. M.—History of Science Teaching in England (Joshua C. Gregory) 256 URWICK, E. J.—The Social Good (C. Delisle Burns) 240 VARIOUS AUTHORS.—The Mind (James Drever) ..... 377 Philosophy To-day (L. J. Russell) - - - - 384 ,, ,, The Social Sciences and their Interrelations (O. de Selincourt) ------------ 391 WARD, PAUL W.—Sovereignty (Oliver de Selincourt) ----- 242 WELLS, HONORIA M.—The Phenomenology of Acts of Choice (Beatrice Edgell) 253 WHITEHEAD, A. N.—Symbolism : Its Meaning and Effect (L. J. Russell) - 527 WOLF, A.—Essentials of Scientific Method (L. J. Russell) - 386 WOLF, A. (Translator and Editor). — The Correspondence of Spinoza 544 (J. Laird) 544 WORRINGER, W.—Form in Gothic (L. S. S.) ------ 389 PERIODICALS. British Journal of Psychology (Vol. xviii, Part 2, October, 1927) - - 132 International Journal of Ethics (Vol. xxxviii, No. 1, October, 1927) - - 130 Journal of Philosophy (Vol. xxiv. No. 20, September 29, 1927) ... 133 ,, ,, ,, (Vol. xxiv, No. 21, October 13, 1927) ... 133 ,, ,, ,, (Vol. xxv, No. 1, January 5, 1928) - ... 264 ,, ,, ,, (Vol. xxv. No. 2, January 19, 1928) ... 265 ,, ,, ,, (Vol. xxv. No. 3, February 2, 1928) ... 266 Journal de Psychologie (Twenty-fourth Year, No. 10, December, 1927) - 268 Mind (Vol. xxxvi. No. 144, October, 1927) -..-.. I26 ,, (Vol. xxxvii. No. 145, January, 1928) .--_._ 26i Monist, The (Vol. xxxviii, No. 1, January, 1928) - 263 Philosophical Review (Vol. xxxvi, No. 5, September, 1927) - 128 ,, ,, (Vol. xxxvii, No. 217, January, 1928) ... 267 Revue Neo-Scholastique (Twenty-eighth Year, Second Series, No. 15, August, 1927) -------- ---..134 Revue Philosophique (Fifty-second Year, Nos. n and 12, November-Decem- ber,'1927) 135 (Fifty-third Year, Nos. 1 and 2, January-February, 1928) 269 CORRESPONDENCE. BOAS, GEORGE ------------ 270 CHAPMAN, W. 402 PHILIP, A. 400 KEELING, STANLEY V. 271 WHYTE, L. L ---••-• ---. 270 INSTITUTE NOTES. Annual Meeting (1928). Addresses and Resolutions by— .... 562 (1) The Rt. Hon. The Earl of Balfour (2) Professor L. T. Hobhouse (3) Sir Lynden MacasseMacasseyy (4) The Rt. Hon. Sir RRober( " t Home (5) Sir Martin Conway Aristotelian Society and Mind Association, Joint Annual Session of - - 407 Broadcast Talks ----- 405 vii Downloaded from https://www.cambridge.org/core. 29 Sep 2021 at 23:15:44, subject to the Cambridge Core terms of use.
Recommended publications
  • Writings of Charles De Koninck, Volume
    D E K O N I N The Writings C K of ልሎ CHARLES C H DE KONINCK A R T L h E e S W D r i E t i n K g O s o N f I N C K ልሎ Edited and Translated by Ralph McInerny The Writings of CHARLES DE KONINCK Charles De Koninck, University of Laval, Quebec. The Writings of CHARLES DE KONINCK volume one Edited and Translated by Ralph McInerny with a biography by Thomas De Koninck andልሎ an introduction by Leslie Armour University of Notre Dame Press Notre Dame, Indiana DeKoninck-000.FM 4/15/08 1:17 PM Page iv Copyright © by University of Notre Dame Notre Dame, Indiana www.undpress.nd.edu All Rights Reserved Manufactured in the United States of America Designed by Wendy McMillen Set in ./. Minion by Four Star Books Printed on # Nature’s Recycle paper by Sheridan Books, Inc. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Koninck, Charles de, d. [Works. English. ] The writings of Charles De Koninck / edited and translated by Ralph McInerny ; with a biography by Thomas De Koninck ; and an introduction by Leslie Armour. p. cm. Includes bibliographical references and index. -: ---- (cloth : alk. paper) -: --- (cloth : alk. paper) . Koninck, Charles de, d. Science—Philosophy. I. McInerny, Ralph M. II. Title. '.—dc This book is printed on recycled paper. Contents Preface vii The Philosophy of Charles De Koninck 1 Leslie Armour Charles De Koninck: A Biographical Sketch 69 Thomas De Koninck ልሎ Works by Charles De Koninck The Philosophy of Sir Arthur Eddington (1934) 99 The Cosmos (1936) 235 The Problem of Indeterminism (1935) 355 Reflections on the Problem of Indeterminism (1937) 401 Are the Experimental Sciences Distinct from the Philosophy of Nature? (1941) 443 Index 457 Preface A few years ago, David Quackenbush, a tutor at Thomas Aquinas College in California, conceived the idea of photocopying the Charles De Koninck ar- chives at the University of Laval.
    [Show full text]
  • JAMES TARTAGLIA CV, COMPLETE Revap
    JAMES TARTAGLIA Areas of Specialisation PHILOSOPHY: Philosophy of Mind, Rorty, Metaphysics, Metaphilosophy, Meaning of Life JAZZ: Tenor Saxophone, Composition Areas of Competence PHILOSOPHY: History of Philosophy, Continental and Chinese Philosophy JAZZ: Alto Saxophone, Piano / Keyboards / Organ 1. PERSONAL DETAILS Born: 1973 Nationality: British Business Address: School of Politics, International Relations and Philosophy, Keele University, Staffordshire, ST5 5BG, United Kingdom Email: [email protected] Staff Webpage: http://www.keele.ac.uk/spire/staff/tartaglia/ Personal Website: http://www.jamestartaglia.com/ Tel: +44 (0) 1782-734-315 Fax: +44 (0) 1782-733-592 2. QUALIFICATIONS AND AWARDS 1989 Second place in Daily Telegraph Young Jazz Musician of the Year (GCSE category) 1991 Winner of Daily Telegraph Young Jazz Musician of the Year (Soloist category) 1992 Awarded major scholarship to study at Berklee College of Music, USA (from competitive auditions in Frankfurt, which I was invited to after sending a demo tape) 1992-3 Diploma in Performance Studies, Berklee College of Music, USA (saxophone teacher: George Garzone) 1993-6 BA (Hons) in Philosophy - First Class University College London 1996-8 M.Phil. in Philosophy – Passed, no amendments University College London Thesis Title: ‘Understanding intentionality in terms of natural selection’ 1998-2002 Ph.D. in Philosophy – Passed, no amendments (viva in 2001) 1 University College London Thesis Title: ‘The Obstinacy of Appearance: An analysis and attempted resolution of the explanatory gap debate about consciousness’. (Examiners: Galen Strawson and Scott Sturgeon) 2009 Teaching and Learning in Higher Education Postgraduate Certificate, Keele University 2011 Keele Award for Excellence in Teaching and Learning 3. RESEARCH FUNDING 1996-1998 British Academy Studentship, competition A 1998-2000 British Academy Studentship, competition B 2000-1 A.J.
    [Show full text]
  • Prof. G. Dawes Hicks, F.B.A
    No 3726, MARCH 29, 1941 NATURE 381 adequate explanation has so far been forthcoming. sections, each to be kept submerged for a different Other areas are also known which, after many period of time. The maximum period of inundation years in an almost disease-free state, are now will be eighteen months. This experiment is based becoming rapidly affected. The collective ex­ on the facts that soil fungi such as Fusarium perience, practical and scientific, in Central cubense require oxygen to live, and that, when America is that hydrogen ion concentration is the highly infected soil was submerged for one month master factor determining the severity of Panama under two feet of water, no F. cubense could be disease, followed by texture ; but, as Reinking'!! found in it. The outcome of this experiment will work shows, distribution of the pathogen and be awaited with the greatest interest by all assoc­ density of its population in the soil obviously iated with the extensive alluvial banana lands of require careful consideration •. Central America. Already it has been found that The Panama disease situation in Central in new land, built up by the sedimentation of America is being closely watched, and on the controlled flood water, and therefore subjected to properties of the larger companies every effort is several inundations, the incidence of Panama being made to check its spread and to test out disease has been negligible. This may be con­ any new idea which might eventually have some sidered as an indication of the probable success of economic value. An unusually interesting and flood-fallowing, but time alone will tell.
    [Show full text]
  • 1 Philosophy at University College London
    1 Philosophy at University College London: Part 1: From Jeremy Bentham to the Second World War Talk to Academic Staff Common Room Society, April 2006 Jonathan Wolff I’m quite often asked to give talks but I’m rarely asked to talk about the philosophy department. In fact I can only remember being asked to do this once before: to College Council very soon after Malcolm Grant was appointed as Provost. On that occasion I decided to tell a cautionary tale: painting a picture of the brilliance of the department in the late 1970s – second in the country only to the very much larger department at Oxford; how it was all ruined in the early 1980s by a wave of cost- cutting measures in which all the then internationally known members of the department left; and how it has taken twenty-five years to come close to recovery. This seemed to go down well on the day, but I can’t say that I won the longer term argument about the imprudence of cost-cutting. For this talk I was, at first, at a bit of a loss to know what to talk about. One possibility would be to try to describe the research that currently takes place in the department. But this idea didn’t appeal. Philosophers tend to work on their own, and so we don’t have research groups, as such, or collective projects. We have 15 members of the department, each engaged on their own research. Also, every time I try to summarize their work my colleagues tell me that I have misunderstood it.
    [Show full text]
  • Introduction
    Notes Introduction 1 . Bataille talks of an ‘abyss’ ( 1986 , p. 80); Ryle ( 1971b , p. 182) and Dummett ( 1993 , p. xi) talks of a ‘gulf’. 2 . See Reynolds & Chase, 2011 , pp. 254–255. 3 . A recent survey of the field is given in Floyd, 2009 ; see also Beaney, 1998 ; Preston, 2005 . 4 . See esp. Sluga, 1998 ; Stroll, 2000 ; Glock, 2008 ; Monk, 1996a . See also Hylton, 1990 ; Hacker, 2007 ; Glendinning, 2006 ; Preston, 2007 ; Floyd, 2009 , p. 173. 5 . See e.g. Stroll, 2000 ; Glock, 2008 . See also Reynolds and Chase, 2010 ; Reynolds et al., 2010 . 6 . An early variant of this view is proposed by Urmson (1992 ), who divides the history of philosophical analysis into four types: (i) ‘classical’ analysis (Russell), (ii) ideal-language analysis (early Wittgenstein, Vienna Circle, Quine, Goodman), (iii) ‘therapeutic positivist’ (p. 299) analysis (later Wittgenstein, Ryle, Wisdom, Waismann), and (iv) ‘ordinary language’ analysis (Austin). Weitz ( 1966 ) similarly comments that ‘it has become established practice in anthologies and histories of twentieth century philosophy to divide its analytic parts into (a) Realism, (b) Logical Analysis or Logical Atomism, (c) Logical Positivism, and (d) Linguistic, Ordinary Language, or Conceptual Analysis’ (p. 1). Russell ( 1959 , p. 216) talked of three waves in British philosophy 1914–1959, Wittgenstein’s Tractatus , Logical Positivism, and the later Wittgenstein. More recently, Hacker ( 1996 , pp. 4–5; 2007 ) proposed a similar understanding of analytic philosophy as a series of phases in the history of philosophy, rather than defining it as either a set of necessary and sufficient conditions or as a family resem- blance concept. Whereas Urmson emphasises the ‘decisive break’ (1960 , p.
    [Show full text]
  • Index of Awards the - Nre
    INDEX OF AWARDS THE - NRE The A-T Post Doctoral Fellowship Award, 3 Max Planck Research Award, 19 Ataxia-Telangiectasia Children’s Project Research Grant, 3 Sofja Kovalevskaja Award, 19 Individual Photographer’s Fellowship, 3 Wolf Aviation Fund Grants Program, 20 Abbey Awards, 3 Sloan Industry Studies Fellowships, 20 Abbey Harris Mural Fund, 3 Sloan Research Fellowships, 20 Abdus Salam ICTP Fellowships, 4 Alicia Patterson Journalism Fellowships, 20 Aberystwyth International Postgraduate Excellence Scholarships, 4 Career Awards for Young Teachers, 21 Doctoral Career Development Scholarship (DCDS) Competition, 4 All Saints Educational Trust Corporate Awards, 21 International Masters Scholarships, 4 All Saints Educational Trust Personal Scholarships, 21 Law and Criminology Masters Scholarships, 5 Allen Foundation Grants, 21 Law and Criminology Research Scholarships, 5 AKA-EAF Financial Need Scholarship, 22 School of Management and Business Masters Scholarships, 5 AKA-EAF Merit Scholarships, 22 ABMRF/The Foundation for Alcohol Research Project Grant, 5 Alzheimer’s Australia PhD Scholarships, 22 PhD Position at the Institute of Clinical Medicine, 6 Dementia Grants Program, 22 Newton Advanced Fellowships for International Researchers, 6 Hazel Hawke Research Grant in Dementia Care, 22 Newton International Fellowships, 6 Postdoctoral Fellowship in Dementia, 22 Bo¨ hlke Memorial Endowment Fund, 7 Rosemary Foundation Travel Grant, 23 The Don and Virginia Eckelberry Fellowship, 7 ADDF Grants Program, 23 Jessup and McHenry Awards, 7 Alzheimer’s Research Trust, Clinical Research Fellowship, 23 John J. & Anna H. Gallagher Fellowship, 7 Alzheimer’s Research Trust, Emergency Support Grant, 23 Fred Rogers Memorial Scholarship, 7 Alzheimer’s Research Trust, Equipment Grant, 24 Acadia Graduate Awards, 8 Alzheimer’s Research Trust, Major Project or Programme, 24 Frederick V.
    [Show full text]
  • Journal of Lonergan Studies, Vol. 21, No. 1
    '/OLUME21 SPRING20 METHID: lournat of LonerganStudies aims, first, at furthering interpretive, historical and critical study of the philosophicaf theological, economic, and methodological writings of Bernard Lonergan. second, it aims at promoting original research into the methodological foundations of the sciencesand disciplines. METH)D is published twice yearly, in April and October, by The Lonergan Institute at BostonCollege. SugscRIprtoNpRICE 2003: $16.00 yearly for individuals, $28.00yearly for institutions (U.S. currency). Sunscnlptotrt ORosns must be prepaid in U.S. funds and should be addressed to the Business Managet METH)D, Lonergan Center, Boston College, Chestnut Hill, MA 02L67-3806.Changes of address and other correspondence related to subscriptions and advertising should be sent to the same address. To order on-line, visit www.bc.eddlonerg.rn. MANUSCRIrTSshould be sent to Patrick Byrne, MrrUoD, Lonergan Center, Bapst Library, Boston College, Chestnut Hill, MA 021.67-3806.In order to facilitate an early decisioo authors should send three copies of each manuscript, double-spaced throughout, including footnotes. Submissions should be accompanied by a short biographical note. They can be returned only if adequate postage is included. Accepted articles must follow A Manual of Style (University of Chicago Press) and should be submitted in this form. Referencesto any of Lonergan's writings that have appeared in Collected Works of Bernard Lonergan must cite that edition but may also cite older editions. BooKSFoR REVTEW should be sent to Charles Hefling, METHID, Department of Theology, Carney Hall 417,Boston College, Chestnut Hilf, MA 02'167-3806. BACKTSSUES of most numbers in volumes 1 through 9 may be ordered from MrrgOl, Department of Philosophy, Loyola Marynount University, Loyola Blvd.
    [Show full text]
  • (George Allen & Unwin) 1983
    Bertrand Russell Collected Papers of Bertrand Russell London/Boston/Sidney (George Allen & Unwin) 1983 - 2014 B. Russell, CP I: Cambridge Essays 1888-99 ⋅ Greek Exercises [1888-89] ⋅ How Far Does a Country’s Prosperity Depend on Natural Resources [1889] ⋅ Evolution as Affecting Modern Political Science [1889] ⋅ State-Socialism [1889] ⋅ The Advantages and Disadvantages of Party Government, and the Conditions Necessary for Its Success [1889] ⋅ “The Language of a Nation Is a Monument to Which Every Forcible Individual in the Course of Ages Has Contributed a Stone.“ [1889] ⋅ Contentment; Its Good and Bad Points [1889] ⋅ Destruction Must Precede Construction [1889] ⋅ “A Locked Diary“ [1890-94] ⋅ Die Ehe [1893] ⋅ Self-Appreciation [1897] ⋅ Can We Be Statesmen? [1893] ⋅ Lövborg or Hedda [1894] ⋅ Cleopatra or Maggie Tulliver [1894] ⋅ Is Ethics a Branch of Empirical Psychology? [1897] ⋅ Seems, Madam? Nay, It Is [1897] ⋅ Was the World Good before the Sixth Day? [1899] ⋅ Paper on Epistemology I [1893] ⋅ Paper on Epistemology II [1893] ⋅ Paper on Bacon [1893] ⋅ Paper on History of Philosophy [1894] ⋅ Paper on Epistemology III [1894] ⋅ Paper on Descartes [1894] ⋅ A Critical Comparison of the Methods of Bacon, Hobbes and DesCartes [1894] ⋅ Paper on Bacon [1894] ⋅ Paper on DesCartes I [1894] ⋅ Paper on Descartes II [1894] ⋅ Paper on Hobbes [1894] ⋅ On the Distinction between the Psychological and Metaphysical Points of View [1894] ⋅ On Pleasure [1893] ⋅ On the Foundations of Ethics [1893] ⋅ The Relation of What Ought to Be to What Is, Has Been or Will
    [Show full text]
  • The Common Sense Philosophy of G. E. Moore
    Loyola University Chicago Loyola eCommons Master's Theses Theses and Dissertations 1970 The Common Sense Philosophy of G. E. Moore Mark A. Phillips Loyola University Chicago Follow this and additional works at: https://ecommons.luc.edu/luc_theses Part of the Philosophy Commons Recommended Citation Phillips, Mark A., "The Common Sense Philosophy of G. E. Moore" (1970). Master's Theses. 2480. https://ecommons.luc.edu/luc_theses/2480 This Thesis is brought to you for free and open access by the Theses and Dissertations at Loyola eCommons. It has been accepted for inclusion in Master's Theses by an authorized administrator of Loyola eCommons. For more information, please contact [email protected]. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 License. Copyright © Mark A. Phillips THE COMMON SENSE PHII1080J?Iff OF G. E. MOORE by Mark A. J?hillips A Thesis Submitted to the Faculty of the Graduate School of Loyola University in Partial Fulfillmem:1-'0f· the Requirements for the Degree'' of. ' Master of Philosophy · · . ·" .(., r· \,! June 1970 PREJAOE The primary purpose of this thesis is to clarify the notion ot common sense in the philosophy of G. E. Moore. As such, it will serve as no more than a propaedeutic tor evaluating whether a common sense philosophy is viable. The scope of dis­ cussion is admittedly JD.70pic: there is no presentation of earlier common sense philosophies, nor criticisms of such philosophies. ~e only excuse tor this omission is that it is impossible thor­ ~ughly to discuss even the twentieth-century material in a short work.
    [Show full text]
  • Psychology, Epistemology, and the Problem of the External
    Psychology, Epistemology, and the Problem of the External World: Russell and Before * Gary Hatfield The epistemology and metaphysics of perception were central topics in early analytic philosophy. These topics are best known through the manifold discussions of sense data, sensibilia, and sensory qualities during the early decades of the twentieth century, which continued into the second half of the century (as in Swartz 1965). In connection with the status of sense data, epistemological questions arose concerning the fallibility and directness of perception. Taking the case of vision, which was primary, these questions concerned whether we are directly acquainted with the objects of vision – whatever they may be – or instead apprehend an extra-mental world through the mediation of sensations or sense data, as in a representative theory of perception. They also concerned the nature of the mental act through which we know perceptual objects. A run through the pages of Mind , the Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society , and Journal of Philosophy from 1900 to 1920 reveals that perceptual acts and their objects were central concerns of anglophone philosophy, engaging Moore and Russell, as well as other noted figures including Samuel Alexander (1909–10), George Dawes Hicks (1912), and A. O. Lovejoy (1913). In a recent study, Omar Nasim (2008) has enriched the context for understanding these discussions by examining an interchange that he calls “The Controversy,” which was initiated by the Cambridge psychologist–philosopher G. F. Stout. In 1904, Stout published “Primary and Secondary Qualities” in Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society . Subsequent discussions by Dawes Hicks, Alexander, and T. P.
    [Show full text]
  • American Dissertations on Foreign Education: a Bibliography with Abstracts
    DOCUMENT RESUME ED 351 277 SO 022 710 AUTHOR Parker, Franklin, Ed.; Parker, Betty June, Ed. TTTLE American Dissertations on Foreign Education: A Bibliography with Abstracts. Volume XX. Britain: Biographies of Educators; Scholars' Educational Ideas. REPORT NO ISBN-0-87875-341-9 PUB DATE 90 NOTE 461p.; For prior volumes, see ED 308 111. AVAILABLE FROMWhitston Publishing Company, Post Office Box 958, Troy, NY 12181 ($55.00). PUB TYPE Books (010) Reference Materials Bibliographies (131) EDRS PRICE MFO1 /PC19 Plus Postage. DESCRIPTORS Annotated Bibliographies; *Biographies; *Doctoral Dissertations; *Educational Research; Elementary Secondary Education; Foreign Countries; Higher Education; *International Education IDENTIFIERS *Great Britain ABSTRACT This book contains 236 abstracts of dissertations that concern the ideas and/or lives of educators and scholars who were born and taught in Great Britain, or who, if not born in Great Britain, did important teaching, writing, and other work there. The dissertations featured were completed at colleges and universities and other educational institutions in the United States, Canada, and some European countries. The abstracts of the dissertations are compiled in alphabetical order by the author's name. An index is included. (DB) Reproductions supplied by EDRS are the best that can be made from the original document. *********************************************************************** I r U DEPARTMENT Of EDUCATION °Pc* of Educational Research and Improvement EDUCATIONAL RESOURCES INFORMATION CENTER
    [Show full text]
  • Moore's Dilemma
    Moore’s Dilemma Forthcoming The Nature of Phenomenal Qualities , edd. Paul Coates and Sam Coleman, OUP 2014 Final copy prior to publication 13 November 2013; minor corrections 8 March 2015 ABSTRACT In 1918 GE Moore questioned the assumptions behind traditional sense-datum theories and offered the Multiple Relational Theory of Appearing, which he said could not be ruled out as a possible alternative. In 1953, Moore eventually came to reject the alternative and recommend endorsement of the traditional sense-datum theory again. This paper explores what Moore’s reservations in 1918 were, what the correct interpretation of the Multiple Relation Theory should be, and why it made sense for him ultimately to reject it. Moore’s paper throws light both on the nature of the argument from illusion as used in the sense-datum tradition, but also as it has been appealed to in more recent discussions of intentional theories of perception. KEYWORDS Sense-data, GE Moore, Bertrand Russell, Intentionality, Content, Consciousness, Sensible Quality, Argument from Illusion, Appearance, Theory of Appearing I want to consider here a curious turn in the development of the original sense-datum tradition, presented in GE Moore’s Presidential Address of 1918, ‘Some Judgments of Perception’ (hereafter, ‘Some Judgments’ ) (Moore, 1918) (Moore, 1918) (Moore, 1918). This announced a fundamental alteration in his views about what philosophy could establish concerning the nature of sense perception, and it is a position that he officially held from 1918 all the way to 1953, only repudiating the new option he introduced in ‘Some Judgments’ in his final piece of writing on perception, ‘Visual Sense-data’(Moore, 1957)(Moore, 1957)(Moore, 1957).
    [Show full text]