Available Formats
Origins of Analytic Philosophy: Kant and Frege
By (Author) Dr Delbert Reed
Continuum Publishing Corporation
Continuum Publishing Corporation
14th October 2010
NIPPOD
United States
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Philosophy
Analytical philosophy and Logical Positivism
146.4
Paperback
224
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
While the relationship between Kant and other major figures in early analytic philosophy, such as Russell, G. E. Moore, and Rudolf Carnap, has been the subject of full length studies, no such work yet exists on the relationship between Kant and Frege. The Origins of Analytic Philosophy: Kant and Frege addresses this gap in our understanding of the origins of early analytic philosophy. Its concern is to chart the nature and significance of Frege's break with Kant over the question of whether arithmetic is a synthetic a priori or an analytic a priori science. In rejecting Kant's claim that arithmetic is an a priori synthetic science, Frege returns to a conception of the scope and power of pure reason that shows important similarities to the philosophical outlook of Kant's great predecessor and philosophical opponent Gottfried Leibniz.
Delbert Reed shows how, in his attempts to establish the foundations of arithmetic on analytic principles, Frege developed many of the tools, concerns and problems that would dominate the development of analytic philosophy in the 20th century.
"It will unquestionably be informative reading for many." - Journal for the History of Philosophy, 2009
Delbert Reed has taught in the philosophy departments at the University of Minnesota and the University of St Thomas.