Quantifier Variance and Realism
Essays in Metaontology
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Oxford University Press Inc
Published:26th May '11
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
Eli Hirsch has contributed steadily to metaphysics since his ground-breaking (and much cited) work on identity through time (culminating in the 1982 OUP book The Concept of Identity). Within the last 10 years, his work on realism and quantifier variance has been front-and-center in the minds of many metaphysicians. Metametaphysics, which looks at foundational questions about the very practice of metaphysics and the questions it raises, is now a popular area of discussion. There is a lot of anxiety about what ontology is, and Hirsch's diagnosis of how revisionary ontologists go wrong is one of the main views being discussed. This volume collects HIrsch's essays from the last decade (with the exception of one article from 1978) on ontology and metametaphysics which are very much tied to these debates. His essays develop a distinctive language-based argument against various anti-commonsensical views that have recently dominated ontology. All these views go astray, Hirsch says, by failing to interpret ordinary assertions about existence in a plausibly charitable way, so their philosophizing leads them to misuse language about ontology - our ordinary concept of 'what exists' - in favor of a position othat is quite different. Hirsch will supply a new introduction. The volume will interest philosophers of metaphysics currently engaged in these debates.
This looks great - really focusses in on a single, very important strand in his thinking, and it's the strand that's been getting a lot of attention lately. This makes really good sense. * Dean Zimmerman, Philosophy, Rutgers University *
ISBN: 9780199732111
Dimensions: 147mm x 213mm x 31mm
Weight: 408g
288 pages