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Index
The Arguments of the Philosophers
Contents
Preface
Abbreviations
1 The Millian Philosophy
1 Philosophy and its past
2 Logic and metaphysics
3 Ethics and politics
4 The school of experience and association
5 Naturalism and the criterion of general good
6 The dialectic of criticism and allegiance
7 Naturalism, objectivity, autonomy
8 Mill in the present
2 The Analysis of Language
1 ’Of the necessity of commencing with an analysis of language’
2 Propositions
3 Classification of names
4 Connotation and denotation
5 The import of propositions: Conceptualism and Nominalism
6 The import of propositions: Mill’s theory
7 Proper names
8 Predication, assertion, denial
9 Simple and compound propositions
10 Mill and Frege
3 Verbal Propositions and Apparent Inference
1 Agenda
2 Real and verbal propositions
3 Non-connotative propositions are verbal
4 Real and apparent inference
5 Mill’s ‘verbal’ and Kant’s ‘analytic’
6 Essence
7 Defining a name
8 The foundation of an attribute
9 ‘Nominalism’ and Mill’s nominalism
4 The Justification of Deduction
1 Introductory
2 Analysis of rules of deductive inference
3 Mill's analysis of the syllogism
4 Is the syllogism a petitio principii?
5 General propositions have no probative force of their own
6 Demystifying deduction
7 All inference is from particulars to particulars
8 The Logic of Consistency and the Logic of Truth
5 Empiricism in Logic and Mathematics
1 Reviewing the strategy
2 Geometry
3 Arithmetic: the refutation of ‘Nominalism’
4 Numbers and aggregates
5 Arithmetic contains real propositions
6 The laws of thought
7 Perceptual imagination
8 Necessity, aprioricity, and conceivability
9 The a priori in reasoning
Appendix: Mill’s ‘psychologism’
6 Induction and Inductivism
1 Inductive logic
2 ‘The question of Inductive Logic stated’
3 The Law of Universal Causation
4 The eliminative methods of induction (i)
FIRST CANON
SECOND CANON
THIRD CANON
AMENDED THIRD CANON
FOURTH CANON
FIFTH CANON
5 The eliminative methods of induction (ii)
6 The place of the eliminative methods in M.ill’s inductive logic
7 Inductive scepticism and the internal validation of induction
8 Hypotheses17
7 Induction, Perception and Consciousness
1 The ‘phenomenal relativity of knowledge’
2 Inductivism and the manifest image
3 Inductivism and inductive scepticism
4 Naturalism and the classical pre-understanding of meaning
5 The ‘interpretation of consciousness’
6 The ‘introspective’ and the ‘psychological’ methods
7 Phenomenalism9
8 Minds
9 Phenomenalism and naturalism
10 Subjective and objective
8 The Logic of the Moral Sciences
1 ‘Human conduct as a subject of science’
2 Freedom as rational autonomy
3 Empirical and ultimate laws: explanation and reduction
4 The primacy of psychology: associationism
5 Ethology: the historicity of human nature
6 Sociology: the evolutionary science of society
7 The methods of social science
8 Methodological individualism
9 Can there be a ‘science of human nature’?
10 Interpretation
9 Utilitarianism
1 Introductory
2 The ‘proof’ of the Principle of Utility
3 The objectivity of ends: (i) Humean scepticism
4 The objectivity of ends: (ii) the desire-satisfaction model
5 Hedonism
6 The refutation of hedonism
7 Kinds of pleasure and categorial diversity of ends
8 Impartiality and agent-neutral reasons
9 Philosophical utilitarianism
10 Utilitarianism and the distinctness of individuals
11 Indirect utilitarianism9
12 Bentham and Coleridge: conservative holism
13 Justice and rights
14 Autonomy and distribution
15 Reflective equilibrium
10 Liberty
1 The themes of On Liberty
2 The Liberty Principle
3 Foundations for liberty: utility, natural rights, scepticism
4 Individuality
5 Autonomy
6 Paternalism
7 Utility and ideals
8 Liberty, justice and the private domain
9 Liberty of expression: the dialogue model
10 Liberty of expression: fallibilism
11 Liberty of expression: truth, autonomy and the ideal of rationality
12 Towards liberalism
Notes
Bibliography
Index
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