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         Empiricism Philosophy:     more books (100)
  1. The Legacy of the Vienna Circle : Modern Appraisals (Science and Philosophy in the Twentieth Century: Basic Works of Logical Empiricism) by Sahotra Sarkar, 1996-02-01
  2. The Rhetoric of Empiricism: Language and Perception : From Locke to I.A. Richards by Jules David Law, 1993-09
  3. Midwest Studies in Philosophy, Philosophy and the Empirical
  4. Empiricism and Darwin's Science (The Western Ontario Series in Philosophy of Science) by F. Wilson, 1991-08-31
  5. Introducing Empiricism by Dave Robinson, 2000-08-08
  6. The Empirical Turn in the Philosophy of Technology, Volume 20 (Research in Philosophy and Technology)
  7. Philosophical Standardism: An Empiricist Approach to Philosophical Methodology (Philosophy) by Nicholas Rescher, 2000-06-15
  8. Empiricism and the Philosophy of Mind by Wilfrid Sellars, 2000
  9. Charles Pierce's empiricism (International library of psychology, philosophy, and scientific method) by Justus Buchler, 1939
  10. Impressions of Empiricism: Royal Institute of Philosophy Lectures 1974-1975
  11. Empiricism and the Philosophy of Mind / Counterfactuals, Dispositions, and the Causal Modalities / Imperatives, Intentions and the Logic of Ought by Wilfrid Sellars, 1956
  12. Charles Peirce's Empiricism (International Library of Philosophy) by Justus Buchler, 2000-11-30
  13. EMPIRICISM: An entry from Gale's <i>Encyclopedia of Philosophy</i> by D. Hamlyn, 2006
  14. Three Types of Religious Philosophy (Trinity Papers No. 21) by Gordon H. Clark, 1989-02

41. Philosophy Overview
Bentham and Coleridge Seminal Minds; Timeline of English philosophy and Religion;empiricism; John Locke; John Locke's Neoclassical Program for philosophy;
http://65.107.211.206/philosophy/philov.html
Philosophy Overview
General
Religious and Moral Philosophy
Political and Economic Philosophies
Aesthetics

42. EMPIRICISM AND THE PHILOSOPHY OF MIND
empiricism AND THE philosophy OF MIND. by. Wilfrid Sellars. NoteThis paper was first presented as the University of London Special
http://faculty.oxy.edu/traiger/2002/phil490/texts/Sellars/epm.html
EMPIRICISM AND THE PHILOSOPHY OF MIND
by
Wilfrid Sellars
Note: This paper was first presented as the University of London Special Lectures on Philosophy for 1955-56, delivered on March 1, 8, and 15, 1956, under the title "The Myth of the Given: Three Lectures on Empiricism and the Philosophy of Mind." Edited in Hypertext by Andrew Chrucky Reproduced with the permission of the University of Minnesota Press from: Wilfrid Sellars, "Empiricism and the Philosophy of Mind," in Herbert Feigl and Michael Scriven, eds., Minnesota Studies in the Philosophy of Science, Volume I: The Foundations of Science and the Concepts of Psychology and Psychoanalysis (University of Minnesota Press, 1956), pp. 253-329. When the essay was reprinted in Wilfrid Sellars, Science, Perception and Reality
  • AN AMBIGUITY IN SENSE-DATUM THEORIES (Secs. 1-7)
    ANOTHER LANGUAGE
    (Secs. 8-9)
    THE LOGIC OF 'LOOKS'
    (Secs. 10-20)
    EXPLAINING LOOKS
    (Secs. 21-23)
    IMPRESSIONS AND IDEAS: A LOGICAL POINT
    (Secs. 24-25)
    IMPRESSIONS AND IDEAS: AN HISTORICAL POINT
    (Secs. 26-29)
  • 43. Empiricism And The Philosophy Of Mind
    empiricism and the philosophy of mind Sellars, Wilfrid (1956) MinnesotaStudies in the Phil of Science, vol. 1. Nominator's statement.
    http://cogsci.umn.edu/millennium/1102115100.html
    Home Top 100 Nominations Comment form Empiricism and the philosophy of mind
    Sellars, Wilfrid (1956)
    Minnesota Studies in the Phil of Science, vol. 1
    Nominator's statement
    The first formulation of a fairly explicit functionalism of the intentional. The original formulation of the notion that our concepts of the mental are (like) theoretical concepts. A strong argument that and explanation why thought and language are interdependent. A resounding rejection of dualism. An influential defense of a physicalistic treatment of sensory consciousness. A terribly influential dismantling of the Cartesian notion that our own mentals states are what we know first and best.
    comments
    • This has indeed had tremendous influence in philosophy. It introduces the language of thought hypothesis for the first time. By arguing that our concepts about mental states are parts of a theory about unobservables, it fought against the methodology of behaviorism. Also, since our concepts of the mind are simply part of a theory, it opened the possibility of the truth of eliminative materialism, or the view that such theories might be simply false and in need of replacement by better theories of the mental.
    • This long paper, later republished as a book, contains basically all the key ingredients of 20th century philosophy of mind. Some examples: functionalism, the notion of folk psychology, mental states (including conscious states) as posits of a theory; the relation of the intentional to qualia, and very much more.

    44. §25. "Principles Of Psychology;" Radical Empiricism. XVII. Later Philosophy. Vo
    Reference Cambridge History Later National Literature, Part II Later philosophy Principles of Psychology; Radical empiricism.
    http://www.bartleby.com/227/1025.html
    Select Search All Bartleby.com All Reference Columbia Encyclopedia World History Encyclopedia World Factbook Columbia Gazetteer American Heritage Coll. Dictionary Roget's Thesauri Roget's II: Thesaurus Roget's Int'l Thesaurus Quotations Bartlett's Quotations Columbia Quotations Simpson's Quotations English Usage Modern Usage American English Fowler's King's English Strunk's Style Mencken's Language Cambridge History The King James Bible Oxford Shakespeare Gray's Anatomy Farmer's Cookbook Post's Etiquette Bulfinch's Mythology Frazer's Golden Bough All Verse Anthologies Dickinson, E. Eliot, T.S. Frost, R. Hopkins, G.M. Keats, J. Lawrence, D.H. Masters, E.L. Sandburg, C. Sassoon, S. Whitman, W. Wordsworth, W. Yeats, W.B. All Nonfiction Harvard Classics American Essays Einstein's Relativity Grant, U.S. Roosevelt, T. Wells's History Presidential Inaugurals All Fiction Shelf of Fiction Ghost Stories Short Stories Shaw, G.B. Stein, G. Stevenson, R.L. Wells, H.G. Reference Cambridge History Later National Literature, Part II Later Philosophy Principles of Psychology; Radical Empiricism His Vividness and Humanity Pluralism
    CONTENTS
    VOLUME CONTENTS ... BIBLIOGRAPHIC RECORD
    The Cambridge History of English and American Literature in 18 Volumes
    VOLUME XVII. Later National Literature, Part II.

    45. Encyclopædia Britannica
    period Dominant strands of Renaissance philosophy Political theory;Humanism; philosophy of nature. Rise of empiricism and Rationalism
    http://www.britannica.com/eb/article?eu=115379

    46. Encyclopædia Britannica
    in philosophy, the attitude that beliefs are to be accepted and the Greek word empeiria,“experience.” More specifically, however, empiricism comprises a
    http://www.britannica.com/eb/article?eu=115431

    47. Empiricism – The Philosophy That All Knowledge Is Derived From
    empiricism – The philosophy that all knowledge is derived from experiencehence the experimental approach to Psychology often being called empirical
    http://www.psybox.com/web_dictionary/Empiricism.htm

    48. Catalog Keywords Catalog Title Catalog Author Connect NY Catalog
    Skeptics Dictionary empiricism; Victorian Web philosophy/empiricism; WashingtonState University World Cultures empiricism; Xrefer empiricism.
    http://wally.rit.edu/pubs/guides/philosophy.html
    Catalog Keywords Catalog Title Catalog Author Connect NY Catalog GOOGLE this Site GOOGLE the RIT Site Our Common Novel 2002-2003
    The Intuitionist by Colson Whitehead
    Resources Related to the Philosophy of Science Including Ethics, Empiricism and Intuitionism
    Searching Wallace Library's Einstein Catalog provides information relating to philosophy, ethics, empiricisim and intuitionism.. Remember, you can do a keyword search or a subject search to locate information on a topic. When doing a keyword search, you can make use of Boolean searching by combining your search words with the words and, or, not Advanced searching will allow you to set some limitations to your search results. Below is a sampling of titles along with their call numbers and the floor location.
    Philosophy and Ethics
    • The Cambridge Companion to Aristotle. B485.C35 1995, 4th floor
      A Companion Guide to Ethics.

    49. IV SECOND ATTITUDE OF THOUGHT TO OBJECTIVITY
    No less than empiricism, philosophy (§ 7) recognises only what is, and has nothingto do with what merely ought to be and what is thus confessed not to exist.
    http://www.marxists.org/reference/archive/hegel/works/sl/sl_ivpi.htm
    Encyclopaedia of the Philosophical Sciences (1830) Part One
    IV. Second Attitude of Thought to Objectivity
    ONE. EMPIRICISM
    Under these circumstances a double want began to be felt. Partly it was the need of a concrete subject-matter, as a counterpoise to the abstract theories of the understanding , which is unable to advance unaided from its generalities to specialisation and determination . Partly, too, it was the demand for something fixed and secure, so as to exclude the possibility of proving anything and everything in the sphere, and according to the method of the finite formulae of thought. Such was the genesis of Empirical philosophy , which abandons the search for truth in thought itself, and goes to fetch it from Experience , the outward and the inward present. abstract metaphysic of the understanding failed to satisfy. Now by concreteness of contents it is meant that we must know the objects of consciousness as intrinsically determinate In Empiricism lies the great principle that whatever is true must be in the actual reflection When it is carried out to its legitimate consequences, Empiricism being in its facts limited to the finite sphere denies the supersensible in general, or at least any knowledge of it which would define its nature; it leaves thought no powers except abstraction and formal universality and identity. But there is a fundamental delusion in all scientific empiricism. It employs the metaphysical categories of matter, force, those of one, many, generality, infinity, etc.; following the clue given by these categories it proceeds to draw conclusions, and in so doing presupposes and applies the

    50. PHIL 5383 Seminar In American Philosophy
    Verificationism, and Logical Positivism, Handouts Carnap, empiricism, Semantics,and Ontology Sellars, empiricism and philosophy of Mind p.1439.
    http://www.pragmatism.org/shook/american_phil/prag_epistemology.htm
    OKLAHOMA STATE UNIVERSITY
    PHIL 5383 Seminar in American Philosophy:
    20th Century Epistemologies and Pragmatism
    Spring 2002 Professor John Shook
    Course Description This course examines prominent epistemologies in American philosophy during the 20th Century. Theories of knowledge and truth to be explored: Peirce's pragmaticism, James's pragmatism, correspondence theories , foundationalism, coherence theories, Dewey's experimentalism, logical positivism and empiricism, Sellars's pragmatism, Quine's naturalistic empiricism, Gettier problems, Tarski's semantics, deflationism, minimalism, and the positions of Putnam, Haack, Davidson, and Rorty. Required Texts Michael Lynch, ed. The Nature of Truth , MIT Press William James, Pragmatism and the Meaning of Truth , Harvard University Press Nathan Houser, ed. The Essential Peirce , Vol. 1, Indiana University Press John Dewey, Logic, Later Works of John Dewey , vol. 12, Southern Illinois University Press Hilary Putnam, The Threefold Cord , Columbia University Press Requirements Your grade will be based on one exam, one term paper, 4 short essays, and

    51. Phenomenology, Relation Philosophy, Empiricism, Non Religious Existentialism, Re
    Phenomenology, Relation philosophy, empiricism, Non religious Existentialism,Religious Existentialism Gestalt Therapy (O'Neill
    http://www.behavior.net/forums/archives/gestalt/1998/1_5-42.htm
      Phenomenology, Relation Philosophy, Empiricism, Non religious Existentialism, Religious Existentialism...
      Gestalt Therapy (O'Neill)
      • Mission Statement by Brian O'Neill, 10/31/96 Phenomenology, Relation Philosophy, Empiricism, Non religious Existentialism, Religious Existentialism...
        by Afonso H Lisboa da Fonseca, 2/28/97 I like the statements of coleagues that enphsize experience, although I think also, as they agree I think, that we're BEYOND the time in which just experience is enough. In the teoretical level, we need to define what experience other in its difference and autonomy. To value the difference of the otherness of the other is fundamental, and to value it as a phenomenological private self, particularly for itself, also. I think we can't do this from an empiricist approach... The life philosophy, which is implicit in GT is clearly existential and dialogic, and this is fundamental. The radical recognizing of the innocence of life and of the body. And the deep respect for the affirmation of life in its spontaneity, includig when it is suffering. This is I think basic in GT. Also I think we need to clarify the good and balanced interaction between phenomenology, existentialism and pragmatism. The pragmatic perspective was and seems to be fundamental: if it can avoid to be transformed in row empiricism...
          No Replies

    52. Philosophy 122: British Empiricism Fall 2000
    philosophy 422 The British Empiricists Spring 2002. Professor EdwinMcCann. MHP205F, 213-740-5169, FAX 213-740-5174; mccann@usc.edu.
    http://www-rcf.usc.edu/~mccann/courses/emps/422s021a.html
    Philosophy 422: The British Empiricists Spring 2002 Professor Edwin McCann MHP-205F, 213-740-5169, FAX 213-740-5174; mccann@usc.edu Office hours: M 11-1; W 11-12 A close study of the principal writings of John Locke, George Berkeley, and David Hume on topics in epistemology and metaphysics, including: perception and the theory of ideas, skepticism, scientific explanation, causality, identity, personal identity, substance, and natural kinds. Special attention will be paid to the relation between the philosophical views of each of these thinkers and the new mechanistic natural science. Requirements 1. Regular attendance and participation in discussion. 2. Three 4-5 page papers (each worth 25% of course grade). 3. In-class essay-format final examination (25% of course grade). Books for the course
  • John Locke, An Essay concerning Human Understanding ed. Peter H. Nidditch (Oxford University Press). George Berkeley, A Treatise concerning the Principles of Human Knowledge ed. Jonathan Dancy (Oxford University Press).
  • 53. OUP: Wittgenstein, Empiricism, And Language: Cook
    Preface; List of Abbreviations; Introduction; Part I The Way Out of the Flytrap;1 The Subject Matter of philosophy; 2 empiricism and the Flight from Solipsism;3
    http://www.oup.co.uk/isbn/0-19-513298-X
    VIEW BASKET Quick Links About OUP Career Opportunities Contacts Need help? oup.com Search the Catalogue Site Index American National Biography Booksellers' Information Service Children's Fiction and Poetry Children's Reference Dictionaries Dictionary of National Biography Digital Reference English Language Teaching Higher Education Textbooks Humanities International Education Unit Journals Law Medicine Music Oxford English Dictionary Reference Rights and Permissions Science School Books Social Sciences World's Classics UK and Europe Book Catalogue Help with online ordering How to order Postage Returns policy ... Table of contents
    Wittgenstein, Empiricism, and Language
    John W. Cook , Emeritus Professor of Philosophy, University of Oregan
    0-19-513298-X
    Publication date: 2 December 1999
    OUP USA 240 pages, 234mm x 156mm
    Ordering Individual customers may:
    order by phone, post, or fax

    This title has to be ordered from another OUP branch; please allow 6 weeks for delivery. To place an order, click here
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    54. KLUWER Academic Publishers | Empiricism
    Berkeley's philosophy of Science Richard J. Brook February 1974, ISBN 90247-1555-5 Hume,Precursor of Modern empiricism An Analysis of his Opinions on Meaning
    http://www.wkap.nl/home/topics/5/Q/1/
    Title Authors Affiliation ISBN ISSN advanced search search tips Home Browse by Subject ... Modern Philosophy Empiricism
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    Publication Date

    Berkeley's Philosophy of Science

    Richard J. Brook
    February 1974, ISBN 90-247-1555-5, Hardbound
    Printing on Demand
    Price: 121.00 EUR / 145.50 USD / 87.75 GBP
    Add to cart

    Complementary Notions
    A Critical Study of Berkeley's Theory of Concepts D. Parke July 1972, ISBN 90-247-1338-2, Paperback Out of Print Diderot's Politics Antony Strugnell July 1973, ISBN 90-247-1540-7, Hardbound Printing on Demand Price: 134.00 EUR / 128.00 USD / 78.00 GBP Add to cart Discord in Zion The Puritan Divines and the Puritan Revolution, 1640-1660 Tai Liu July 1973, ISBN 90-247-5156-X, Hardbound Printing on Demand Price: 138.00 EUR / 145.50 USD / 87.75 GBP Add to cart From Instrumentalism to Constructive Realism On Some Relations Between Confirmation, Empirical Progress, and Truth Approximation Theo A.F. Kuipers February 2000, ISBN 0-7923-6086-9, Hardbound Price: 147.50 EUR / 172.00 USD / 108.25 GBP Add to cart Henry de Boulainviller Tome I Oeuvres philosophiques July 1973, ISBN 90-247-1332-3, Hardbound

    55. KLUWER Academic Publishers | Empiricism
    1974, ISBN 90247-1582-2, Paperback Out of Print Berkeley's philosophy of Science Hume,Precursor of Modern empiricism An Analysis of his Opinions on Meaning
    http://www.wkap.nl/home/topics/5/Q/1/?sort=P&results=0

    56. Empiricism
    Can we implement the philosophy of empiricism in studying such things as the originof the universe, the evolution of our species, and the mechanism of the mind
    http://phobos.ramapo.edu/~gbear/empiricism.htm
    Empiricism
    Excerpts from Gordon Bear's textbook Statistics: A Toolkit for Empiricists There is a useful word for work like surveys and experiments that seeks to generate knowledge by collecting and interpreting observations: empirical . The philosophy that motivates such work, empiricism , offers sound advice to anyone curious about anything: “Go see for yourself. Don’t trust what common sense says. Don’t trust what other people say—not even experts. Make your own observations.” Home Page] [Endeavors] For more about empiricism, read on. Those observations should be collected carefully, for people are prone to errors in perception and judgment and memory. If you rely on only your recollections of your mere impressions, your observations are just barely empirical.
    Care is also essential in the interpretation of observations, for they can be misleading. But careful observations collected systematically and interpreted prudently foster insights into this complex universe of ours—insights that can take us far beyond common sense, insights that have often proven experts wrong.
    Enunciated here is the philosophy of science, a unique tradition of inquiry that may be humanity’s finest achievement. Science vastly amplifies the power of our minds and our hands. Through science we have become privy to mysterious secrets of nature, created vaccines that prevent hideous diseases, and flown explorers to the distant moon.

    57. Methods And Issues In Analytic Philosophy: Normativity
    Wilfrid Sellars, empiricism and the philosophy of Mind. 20th. Wilfrid Sellars,“empiricism and the philosophy of Mind,” Parts One and Two.
    http://humanities.uchicago.edu/depts/maph/ferro_course.html
    Methods and Issues in Analytic Philosophy.
    Winter 2003: MAPH 34120 / PHIL 23110
    Chris Ferro
    cjferro@uchicago.edu
    Classics 45G
    Office Hours: TBA. Course Description:
    This course is designed to introduce students to some of the problems, methodologies, and motivations of analytic philosophy. Taking philosophical debate about the concept of normativity as our guiding theme, we will read a series of texts that have been formative of contemporary work in the philosophy of mind, the philosophy of language, and epistemology. Readings will be drawn from the writings of Frege, Carnap, Quine, Davidson, Kripke, Sellars, and McDowell, among others. Required Texts:
    Gottloeb Frege (edited by Michael Beaney), The Frege Reader.
    Saul Kripke, Wittgenstein on Rules and Private Language
    Wilfrid Sellars, Empiricism and the Philosophy of Mind
    John McDowell, Mind and World
    These texts are available for purchase at the Seminary Co-op. A course packet of additional required readings (as well as some recommended readings) will also be available for purchase shortly. Course Requirements: Students enrolled in the class for credit will be required to complete two take-home examinations and one short paper (in all, approximately 15 to 20 pages of writing), to be handed in on the dates listed below. The first examination will be worth 20% of the final grade, the paper will be worth 30%, the final examination will be worth 40%. Attendance and participation in class discussions will be worth 10%. The two examinations, as well as paper topics for the short paper, will be distributed a week or two prior to the due date of the respective assignment.

    58. Notes On - "The Philosophy Of Rudolf Carnap"
    14. Values and Practical Decisions. II. DESCRIPTIVE AND CRITICAL ESSAYS ON THEPHILOSOPHY OF RUDOLF CARNAP. CHARLES MORRIS, Pragmatism and Logical empiricism.
    http://www.rbjones.com/rbjpub/philos/bibliog/carnap63.htm
    by on
    The Philosophy of Rudolf Carnap
    Edited by Paul Arthur Schilpp
    The Library of Living Philosophers, Volume 11 I. CARNAP'S INTELLECTUAL AUTOBIOGRAPHY I. The Development of my Thinking My Student Years The Beginning of My Work in Philosophy (1919-1926) The Vienna Circle (1926-1935) America (Since 1936)
    A. My Life in the United States
    B. The Situation of Philosophy in the United States... II. Philosophical Problems Pseudo Problems in Philosophy The Foundations of Mathematics Physicalism and the Unity of Science The Logical Syntax of Language Liberalization of Empiricism Semantics Language Planning Probability and Inductive Logic The Theoretical Language Values and Practical Decisions II. DESCRIPTIVE AND CRITICAL ESSAYS ON THE PHILOSOPHY OF RUDOLF CARNAP CHARLES MORRIS Pragmatism and Logical Empiricism ROBERT S. COHEN Dialectical Materialism and Carnap's Logical Empiricism PHILIPP FRANK The Pragmatic Components in Carnap's 'Elimination of Metaphysics' PAUL HENLE Meaning and Verifiability KARL R. POPPER The Demarcation Between Science and Metaphysics HERBERT FEIGL Physicalism, Unity of Science and the Foundations of Psychology

    59. John Dewey: The Influence Of Darwin On Philosophy And Other Essays: Chapter 9: T
    Citation John Dewey. The Postulate of Immediate empiricism , Chapter9 in The Influence of Darwin on philosophy and Other Essays.
    http://spartan.ac.brocku.ca/~lward/dewey/Dewey_1910b/Dewey_1910_09.html
    The Influence of Darwin on Philosophy and Other Essays
    Chapter 9: The Postulate of Immediate Empiricism
    Citation: John Dewey. "The Postulate of Immediate Empiricism", Chapter 9 in The Influence of Darwin on Philosophy and Other Essays. New York: Henry Holt and Company (1910) : 226 - 241.
    THE POSTULATE OF IMMEDIATE EMPIRICISM
    THE criticisms made upon that vital but still unformed movement variously termed radical empiricism, pragmatism, humanism, functionalism, according as one or another aspect of it is uppermost, have left me with a conviction that the fundamental difference is not so much in matters overtly discussed as in a presupposition that remains tacit: a presupposition as to what experience is and means. To do my little part in clearing up the confusion, I shall try to make my own presupposition explicit. The object of this paper is, then, to set forth what I understand to be the postulate and the criterion of immediate empiri cism. Immediate empiricism postulates that things- anything, everything, in the ordinary or nontechnical use of the term " thing "- are what they are experienced as. Hence, if one wishes to describe anything truly, his task is to tell what it is experienced as being. If it is a horse that is to be described, or the equus that is to be defined, then must the horse-trader, or the jockey, or the timid family man who wants a " safe driver," or the zoologist or the paleontologist tell us what the horse is which is experienced. If these accounts turn out different in some respects, as well as congruous in others, this is no reason for assuming the content of one to be exclusively " real," and that of others to be " phenomenal"; for each account of what is experienced will manifest that it is the account o f the horse-dealer, or of the zoologist, and hence will give the conditions requisite for understanding the differences as well as the agreements of the various accounts. And the principle varies not a whit if we bring in the psychologist's horse, the logician's horse, or the metaphysician's horse.

    60. Members Of Staff :: Philosophy @
    HM Robinson, MA (Oxford), M.Phil. (Nottingham), Ph.D. (Liverpool). Mr Robinson normallylectures in empiricism, philosophy of Mind and philosophy of Religion.
    http://www.liv.ac.uk/Philosophy/staff.html
    Jump to a topic Home page Department Student Resources General Pages Text-related Discussion Organisations Miscellaneous Specialist Pages Calls for Consultation Sherlock plugin Advanced Search/Hippias/Noesis Contact us Help with this site (FAQs) Home Department Student Resources General pages ... Site Map
    Below is a list of the members of Staff currently working in the Department of Philosophy. Included is a summary of their research interests and, where available, links to their homepages. Head of Department S. R. L. Clark, M.A., D.Phil. (Oxford) . Professor Clark lectures in Greek Philosophical Thought, Plato, Aristotle, Hellenistic Philosophy, Plotinus, Ethics and Philosophical Theology. Further interests include Animals and the Environment, Philosophy of Biology, Science Fiction and Neo-platonism. Prof. Richard Gaskin , M.A., B.Phil., D.Phil (Oxford). Prof.Gaskin lectures in Wittgenstein, Medieval Philosophy, and Philosophy of Language. At present (2002-3) he has AHRB-funded research leave. Secretaries Mrs. Frances Ali (

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