
Locke
Vere Chappell(Editor)
Oxford University Press
Published on 25. June 1998
Book
Paperback/Softback
336 pages
978-0-19-875197-7 (ISBN)
Description
Oxford Readings in Philosophy
The aim of this series is to bring together important recent writings in major areas of philosophical inquiry, selected from a variety of sources, mostly periodicals, which may not be conveniently available to the university student or the general reader. The editors of each volume contribute an introductory essay on the items chosen and on the questions with which they deal. A selective bibliography is appended as a guide to further reading.
This new volume in the successful Oxford Readings in Philosophy series presents fifteen recently published articles on the main topics in Locke's Essay Concerning Human Understanding. The increased interest in Locke's philosophy over the past twenty years has resulted in more rigorous, better informed, and more philosophically sophisticated studies than ever before. The essays included here represent the best of this recent work. Each article covers one or more major issues in Locke's Essay. Together they cover all the key themes, including: innate ideas, ideas and perception, primary and secondary qulaities, free will, substance, personal identity, language, essence, knowledge, and belief. The authors include some of the world's leading Locke scholars: Michael R. Ayers, Margaret Atherton, J.L. Mackie, John Campbell, Vere Chappell, Martha Brandt Bolton, Jonathan Bennett and Kenneth P. Winkler. Their essays exemplify the best - and most accessible - recent scholarship on Locke, making it essential for students and specialists.
The aim of this series is to bring together important recent writings in major areas of philosophical inquiry, selected from a variety of sources, mostly periodicals, which may not be conveniently available to the university student or the general reader. The editors of each volume contribute an introductory essay on the items chosen and on the questions with which they deal. A selective bibliography is appended as a guide to further reading.
This new volume in the successful Oxford Readings in Philosophy series presents fifteen recently published articles on the main topics in Locke's Essay Concerning Human Understanding. The increased interest in Locke's philosophy over the past twenty years has resulted in more rigorous, better informed, and more philosophically sophisticated studies than ever before. The essays included here represent the best of this recent work. Each article covers one or more major issues in Locke's Essay. Together they cover all the key themes, including: innate ideas, ideas and perception, primary and secondary qulaities, free will, substance, personal identity, language, essence, knowledge, and belief. The authors include some of the world's leading Locke scholars: Michael R. Ayers, Margaret Atherton, J.L. Mackie, John Campbell, Vere Chappell, Martha Brandt Bolton, Jonathan Bennett and Kenneth P. Winkler. Their essays exemplify the best - and most accessible - recent scholarship on Locke, making it essential for students and specialists.
More details
Series
Language
English
Place of publication
Oxford
United Kingdom
Target group
College/higher education
Dimensions
Height: 203 mm
Width: 135 mm
Thickness: 20 mm
Weight
382 gr
ISBN-13
978-0-19-875197-7 (9780198751977)
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Schweitzer Classification
Person
Vere Chappell is Professor of Philosophy at the University of Massachusetts. He is the co-author, with Willis Doney, of Twenty-Five Years of Descartes Scholarship (Garland 1987) and editor of the Cambridge Companion to Locke (1995). He has also edited Essays on Early Modern Philosophers (12 vols., Garland 1992) and Descartes' Meditations (Rowman and Littlefield 1997). His other publications include articles on Descartes and other early modern philosophers, as well as several on Locke.
Content
Notes on references ; Introduction ; 1. The Foundations of Knowledge and the Logic of Substance: The Structure of Locke's General Philosophy ; 2. Locke and the Issue over Innateness ; 3. Locke and Representative Perception ; 4. Locke on Qualities ; 5. Locke on the Freedom of the Will ; 6. Substances, Substrata and Names of Substances in Locke's Essay ; 7. Substratum ; 8. Locke on Personal Identity ; 9. Locke on Language ; 10. The Inessentiality of Locke's Essences ; 11. The Relevance of Locke's Theory of Ideas to his Doctrine of Nominal Essence and Anti-Essentialist Semantic Theory ; 12. Locke: 'Our Knowledge, Which All Consists in Propositions' ; 13. Lockean Mechanism ; 14. Moral Science and the Concept of Persons in Locke ; 15. Locke and the Ethics of Belief ; References ; Notes on contributors ; Bibliography ; Index of Passages Referred To