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Dummett and the origins of analytical philosophy

journal contribution
posted on 2009-12-01, 00:00 authored by George DukeGeorge Duke
Michael Dummett has argued that the linguistic turn, initiated by Frege, is the decisive moment in the birth of the analytical tradition and what distinguishes that tradition from other movements. The thesis of the paper is that Dummett’s account of the origins of the analytical tradition understates the extent to which Frege’s work, and the linguistic turn more generally, are responses to antinomies in the modern philosophical project. An adequate characterisation of the origins of the analytic tradition presupposes an account of the fundamental conceptual shift that occurred during the time of the scientific revolution and the epistemological problems that arose in conjunction with this shift. This is why it is misleading to assert, with Dummett, that the really interesting developments in terms of understanding the analytical tradition are subsequent to Frege. The most productive contrast in terms of understanding the origins of the analytical tradition is not between pre and post Fregean thought, the paper argues, but between modern and premodern conceptions of philosophy and its relation to the world of everyday experience.

History

Journal

The review of metaphysics

Volume

63

Issue

2

Pagination

329 - 347

Publisher

Philosophy Education Society, Inc.

Location

Washington, D.C.

ISSN

0034-6632

eISSN

2154-1302

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2009, by The Review of Metaphysics.

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