Expressing the world : skepticism, Wittgenstein, and Heidegger /

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Bibliographic Details
Author / Creator:Rudd, Anthony, 1963-
Imprint:Chicago : Open Court, c2003.
Description:xii, 262 p. ; 23 cm.
Language:English
Subject:
Format: Print Book
URL for this record:http://pi.lib.uchicago.edu/1001/cat/bib/4924632
Hidden Bibliographic Details
ISBN:0812695348 (pbk. : alk. paper)
Notes:Includes bibliographical references (p. 249-257) and index.
Table of Contents:
  • Preface and Acknowledgments
  • Introduction: Skepticism and Expression
  • Part I. Skepticism and Externalism
  • 1.. Skepticism
  • 1.1.. Types of Skepticism
  • 1.2.. Skeptical Arguments: Dreams and Hallucinations
  • 1.3.. The Causal Argument
  • 1.4.. Skepticism, Science, and Common Sense
  • 2.. Externalism
  • 2.1.. Realist Externalism
  • 2.2.. Kantian Externalism
  • 3.. Heidegger and the "Scandal of Philosophy"
  • 3.1.. Being-in-the-World and the Critique of Skepticism
  • 3.2.. Skepticism and the Question of Realism
  • 3.3.. Realism, Idealism, and the Thing-in-Itself
  • 4.. Wittgenstein, Externalism, and Antirealism
  • 4.1.. Wittgensteinians and Global Skepticism
  • 4.2.. Meaning, Use, and Understanding
  • 4.3.. Comparing Externalisms
  • 4.4.. Realism, Skepticism, and the External World
  • Conclusion to Part I
  • Part II. Wittgenstein and Other-Mind Skepticism
  • 5.. Skepticism about Other Minds
  • 6.. Wittgenstein on Other Minds
  • 6.1.. Misunderstandings of Wittgenstein
  • 6.2.. Other Minds: Wittgenstein's Strategy
  • 6.3.. The Private Language Argument
  • 6.4.. The Expression of Sensations
  • 6.5.. Expressions as Criteria
  • 6.6.. Realism about the Mind
  • 7.. Expressivism and the Mind
  • 7.1.. Expressive Perception
  • 7.2.. Types of Expressive State
  • 7.3.. Implications of Expressivism
  • 8.. Knowing Other Minds--Criticisms and Replies
  • 8.1.. Science and the Mind
  • 8.2.. The Hiddenness of the Inner
  • 8.3.. Knowledge and Acknowledgement
  • Part III. Heidegger and the External World
  • 9.. Expressivism and the Physical World
  • 10.. Recovering the World: Romanticism
  • 10.1.. Natural Supernaturalism; or, Phenomenal Noumenalism
  • 10.2.. Objections and Replies
  • 10.3.. Dejection, Joy, and Horror
  • 10.4.. Losing the World
  • 11.. Phenomenology, Expressive Realism, and the External World
  • 11.1.. On Substance: Merleau-Ponty
  • 11.2.. The Later Heidegger
  • 11.3.. Alethia and Physis
  • 11.4.. Heidegger on Perceiving Things
  • 12.. Being Attuned
  • 12.1.. Anxiety and Nothingness
  • 12.2.. Sartre Looks at a Tree
  • 12.3.. Buber Looks at a Tree
  • 12.4.. Heidegger Looks at a Tree
  • Bibliography
  • Index