Frege s Philosophy. Course Outline and Selected Reading

Similar documents
Frege. Michael Beaney

The Strengths and Weaknesses of Frege's Critique of Locke By Tony Walton

Frege on Numbers: Beyond the Platonist Picture

Thinking of Particulars 1

7AAN2056: Philosophy of Mathematics Syllabus Academic year 2016/17

On Recanati s Mental Files

History of Analytic Philosophy

ÜBER SINN UND BEDEUTUNG 1

Background to Gottlob Frege

Introduction to Special Issue: Dedekind and the Philosophy of Mathematics

GOTTLOB FREGE: SOME FORMS OF INFLUENCE

A difficulty in the foundation of Analytic Philosophy

CONTINGENCY AND TIME. Gal YEHEZKEL

40 THE JOURNAL OF PHILOSOPHY. LIVING WAGES OF SINN* Frege's concept sense (Sinn) is better understood now than it

Frege: Two Theses, Two Senses

Philosophy Faculty Reading List and Course Outline PART IA PAPER 03: LOGIC

Cambridge Introductions to Philosophy new textbooks from cambridge

The Philosophy of Language. Frege s Sense/Reference Distinction

The Semantic Significance of Frege s Puzzle

7AAN2026 Greek Philosophy I: Plato Syllabus Academic year 2015/16

What is Character? David Braun. University of Rochester. In "Demonstratives", David Kaplan argues that indexicals and other expressions have a

History of Analytic Philosophy

Penultimate draft of a review which will appear in History and Philosophy of. $ ISBN: (hardback); ISBN:

A Note on Analysis and Circular Definitions

Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of the Terms & Conditions of Use, available at

Frege on Ideal Language, Multiple Analyses, and Identity

Lee Walters. Areas of Specialization and Competence. Employment. Education

GRADUATE SEMINARS

The Ancient Philosophers: What is philosophy?

RETURNING TO OUR SENSES

The Language Revolution Russell Marcus Fall Class #7 Final Thoughts on Frege on Sense and Reference

Anscombe, G.E.M.: 1969 Causality and Extensionality in: The Journal of Philosophy 66:

Nissim Francez: Proof-theoretic Semantics College Publications, London, 2015, xx+415 pages

COGNITION AND IDENTIFYING REFERENCE. Gary Rosenkrantz

2176 Book Reviews as free open-source software, will serve as a lasting contribution of the translation project even beyond the translation itself. Vo

Referential Zero Point

PH 360 CROSS-CULTURAL PHILOSOPHY IES Abroad Vienna

History of Analytic Philosophy

The ambiguity of definite descriptions

Introduction. Fiora Salis University of Lisbon

THE PARADOX OF ANALYSIS

RUSSELL AND FREGE ON THE LOGIC OF FUNCTIONS

Logic and Philosophy of Science (LPS)

138 Great Problems in Philosophy and Physics - Solved? Chapter 11. Meaning. This chapter on the web informationphilosopher.com/knowledge/meaning

Philosophy Faculty Reading Lists PART II PAPER 07: MATHEMATICAL LOGIC

We know of the efforts of such philosophers as Frege and Husserl to undo the

Mind Association. Oxford University Press and Mind Association are collaborating with JSTOR to digitize, preserve and extend access to Mind.

The Logic in Dedekind s Logicism

6AANB th Century Continental Philosophy. Basic information. Module description. Assessment methods and deadlines. Syllabus Academic year 2016/17

Reviewed by Max Kölbel, ICREA at Universitat de Barcelona

Scientific Philosophy

The non-conceptuality of the content of intuitions: a new approach

Journal for the History of Analytical Philosophy Volume 2, Number 2

QUESTIONS AND LOGICAL ANALYSIS OF NATURAL LANGUAGE: THE CASE OF TRANSPARENT INTENSIONAL LOGIC MICHAL PELIŠ

WHITEHEAD'S PHILOSOPHY OF SCIENCE AND METAPHYSICS

Each copy of any part of a JSTOR transmission must contain the same copyright notice that appears on the screen or printed page of such transmission.

The Language Revolution Russell Marcus Fall 2015

1/8. Axioms of Intuition

Philosophy of Logic and Language 108 Reading List

Replies to the Critics

EMPLOYMENT EDUCATION PUBLICATIONS. Articles and Chapters

The Chinese University of Hong Kong Department of Philosophy. PHIL 2050 History of Western Philosophy II Course Outline

Meaning, Use, and Diagrams

By Tetsushi Hirano. PHENOMENOLOGY at the University College of Dublin on June 21 st 2013)

NINO B. COCCHIARELLA LOGIC AND ONTOLOGY

Two-Dimensional Semantics the Basics

Kant s Critique of Judgment

A Note on the "Carving Up Content" Principle in Frege's Theory of Sense

Journal for the History of Analytical Philosophy

From Pythagoras to the Digital Computer: The Intellectual Roots of Symbolic Artificial Intelligence

PLEASE SCROLL DOWN FOR ARTICLE

Department of Philosophy Florida State University

The Function Is Unsaturated

Relativism 1: Representational Content

Frege: Two Kinds of Meaning

The Prenective View of propositional content

Frege on the Psychological. John F. Horty. Philosophy Department and. University of Maryland. College Park, MD (

Relativism and Knowledge Attributions

Lecture 10 Popper s Propensity Theory; Hájek s Metatheory

Review of Epistemic Modality

Non-Classical Logics. Viorica Sofronie-Stokkermans Winter Semester 2012/2013

On Meaning. language to establish several definitions. We then examine the theories of meaning

Tentative Schedule (last UPDATE: February 8, 2005 ) Number Date Topic Reading Information Oral General Presentations Assignments

Aaron Preston (ed.) Analytic Philosophy: An Interpretive History [Book review]

Intentionality is the mind s capacity to direct itself on things. Mental states like

FREGEAN DE RE THOUGHTS. Marco Aurélio Sousa Alves. The University of Texas at Austin

Pragmatism and Idealism

PAUL REDDING S CONTINENTAL IDEALISM (AND DELEUZE S CONTINUATION OF THE IDEALIST TRADITION) Sean Bowden

Putting it very crudely, it might be said that in the much-discussed opening. Hegel s Anticipation of the Early History of Analytic Philosophy

Objectivity, Relativism and Context Dependence

The Poverty Of Conceptual Truth: Kant's Analytic/Synthetic Distinction And The Limits Of Metaphysics By R. Lanier Anderson READ ONLINE

Types of perceptual content

Philosophy Department Expanded Course Descriptions Fall, 2007

SENSE AND OBJECTIVITY IN FREGE'S LOGIC

Katalin Farkas Central European University, Budapest

Fictional Names: A Critical Study of Some Theories Not Committed to the Existence of Fictional Entities. Angelo Napolano

The Reference Book, by John Hawthorne and David Manley. Oxford: Oxford University Press 2012, 280 pages. ISBN

Necessity in Kant; Subjective and Objective

The Relevance of Hegel s Logic

Introduction p. 1 The Elements of an Argument p. 1 Deduction and Induction p. 5 Deductive Argument Forms p. 7 Truth and Validity p. 8 Soundness p.

Transcription:

Frege s Philosophy Course Outline and Selected Reading The main text for this course is: Frege, Gottlob, (FR) The Frege Reader, ed. (Blackwell, 1997) This contains a selection of Frege s writings, including all his important articles and excerpts from all three of his major books. Of these books, the most accessible is: Frege, Gottlob, (FA) The Foundations of Arithmetic (Koebner, 1884), tr. J. L. Austin (Blackwell, 1950) I provide an introduction to Frege s philosophy, focusing on his notion of sense, in: Beaney, Michael, (FMS) Frege: Making Sense (Duckworth, 1996) A much shorter introduction can be found in FR, pp. 1-46; and for more recent introductions, see: Beaney, Michael, Chen Bo and Koji Nakatogawa, (FLP) Frege, his Logic and his Philosophy: Interview with, World Philosophy, 3 (2010), tr. into Chinese. Also publ. in English in Journal of Graduate School of Letters, Hokkaido University, Japan, 2010, online at: let.hokudai.ac.jp/en/archive Beaney, Michael, (F) Frege, in Barry Lee, ed., Philosophy of Language: The Key Thinkers (Continuum, 2011), ch. 1 For other book-length introductions to Frege s philosophy, I recommend: Textor, Mark, (FSR) Frege on Sense and Reference (Routledge, 2011) Weiner, Joan, (FE) Frege Explained (Open Court, 2004) The definitive collection of papers on Frege published from 1986 to 2005 is: Beaney, Michael and Reck, Erich H., eds., (GFCA) Gottlob Frege: Critical Assessments of Leading Philosophers, 4 vols. (Routledge, 2005) Further essays can be found in: Potter, Michael and Ricketts, Tom, eds., (CCF) The Cambridge Companion to Frege (Cambridge University Press, 2010) Several useful papers on Frege are also contained in: Beaney, Michael, ed., (AT) The Analytic Turn: Analysis in Early Analytic Philosophy and Phenomenology (Routledge, 2007) Beaney, Michael, ed., (OHHAP) The Oxford Handbook of the History of Analytic Philosophy (Oxford University Press, forthcoming) Further reading on each topic is provided in the relevant section below. I have starred the essential primary texts and my suggestions for what you might read first.

Frege s philosophy: Course outline and selected reading 2 (1) Introduction Frege s life and works; Frege s place in the history of philosophy; analytic philosophy and the linguistic turn *FR, Introduction, 1 (pp. 1-10) Beaney, Michael, FMS, Introduction *Beaney, Michael, Chen Bo and Koji Nakatogawa, FLP Burge, Tyler, Gottlob Frege: some forms of influence, in OHHAP Gabriel, Gottfried, Frege and the German background to analytic philosophy, in OHHAP Thiel, Christian and Beaney, Michael, 2005, Frege s Life and Work, in GFCA, I, pp. 23-39 (2) Frege s revolution in logic Frege s use of function argument analysis; invention of quantifier notation; treatment of generality; logical form and grammatical form; existential import *FR, Introduction, 2 (pp. 10-14); Begriffsschrift, Preface, 3, 9 (pp. 48-52, 53-4, 65-8); App. 2 Beaney, Michael, FMS, chs. 1-2, esp. 2.2, 2.4 *, F, 2 Textor, Mark, FSR, chs. 2-3 Weiner, Joan, FE, ch. 3 (3) Logic and conceptual content relationship between logic and language; conceptual content and logical equivalence; interpretive analysis *FR, Begriffsschrift, Preface, 3, 8 (pp. 48-52, 53-4, 64-5); Logic, esp. pp. 239-44 Beaney, Michael, FMS, 2.5

Frege s philosophy: Course outline and selected reading 3 *, F, 4 Goldfarb, Warren, 2001, Frege s Conception of Logic, in GFCA, II, pp. 50-68; also in CCF, pp. 63-85 Textor, Mark, FSR, ch. 3 (4) Concept and object objects/first-level concepts/second-level concepts; problem of the unity of the proposition; paradox of the concept horse; interpretive analysis *FR, Letter to Marty (pp. 79-83); Function and Concept (pp. 130-48); On Concept and Object (pp. 181-93) Beaney, Michael, FMS, 7.1, 7.3 *, F, 3 Oliver, Alex, 2010, What is a predicate?, in CCF, pp. 118-48 Weiner, Joan, FE, ch. 5; ch. 6, pp. 103-14 Wright, Crispin, 1998, Why Frege Does Not Deserve His Grain of Salt: A Note on the Paradox of The Concept Horse and the Ascription of Bedeutungen to Predicates, in J. Brandl and P. Sullivan, eds., New Essays on the Philosophy of Michael Dummett, Grazer Philosophische Studien 55, pp. 239-63; repr. in GFCA, IV, pp. 177-96 (5) Frege s analysis of number statements Frege s logicism; Frege s critique of alternative views; number statements as assertions about concepts; interpretive analysis *FR, Introduction, 3, pp. 14-20; The Foundations of Arithmetic, pp. 84-105 *FA, Introduction and 1-54 (pp. i-ix, 1-67) Beaney, Michael, FMS, ch. 3; 4.1 *, 2003, Russell and Frege, in Nicholas Griffin, ed., The Cambridge Companion to Bertrand Russell (Cambridge University Press, 2003), pp. 128-70; repr. in a shortened and revised form as Frege, Russell and Logicism in GFCA, I, pp. 213-40 Beaney, Michael, 2011, Frege s Logicism and the Significance of Interpretive Analysis, in A. Arana and C. Alvarez, eds., Analytic Philosophy and the Foundations of Mathematics (Palgrave Macmillan)

Frege s philosophy: Course outline and selected reading 4 Dummett, Michael, 1991, Frege: Philosophy of Mathematics (Duckworth), chs. 1-8 MacFarlane, John, 2002, Frege, Kant, and the logic in logicism, Phil. Review, 111, pp. 25-65; repr. in GFCA, I, pp. 71-108 Weiner, Joan, FE, chs. 2, 4 (6) The context principle and Russell s paradox numbers as objects; context principle; contextual definition; abstraction principles; Russell s paradox; Platonism vs. eliminativism about abstract objects *FR, Introduction, 3, pp. 14-21; The Foundations of Arithmetic, pp. 105-129; Grundgesetze, I, Pref. (pp. 194-208); Letter to Russell, 22.6.1902 (pp. 253-4); Grundgesetze, II, 146-7 and App. (pp. 277-89); Sources of Knowledge and Numbers and Arithmetic (pp. 368-73) Beaney, Michael, FMS, 4.2, 4.3, 7.2, 8.2 Dummett, Michael, 1991, Frege: Philosophy of Mathematics (Duckworth), chs. 9-18, 1995, The Context Principle: Centre of Frege s Philosophy, in GFCA, IV, pp. 245-61 Levine, James, 2002, Analysis and Decomposition in Frege and Russell, Phil. Quar. 52, pp. 195-216; repr. in GFCA, IV, pp. 392-413, 2007, Analysis and Abstraction Principles in Russell and Frege, in AT, pp. 51-74 Ricketts, Thomas, 2010, Concepts, objects and the Context Principle, in CCF, pp. 149-219 Weiner, Joan, FE, ch. 7 Wright, Crispin, 1997, On the Philosophical Significance of Frege s Theorem, in GFCA, III, pp. 349-86 (7) Analysis and definition paradox of analysis; constructive vs. analytic definitions; idea of reconstruction *FR, The Foundations of Arithmetic, 88 (p. 122); Review of Husserl (pp. 224-6); Logic in Mathematics, esp. pp. 313-21 Beaney, Michael, FMS, 4.4, 4.5; ch. 5; 8.5; App. 2

Frege s philosophy: Course outline and selected reading 5 *, 2005, Sinn, Bedeutung and the Paradox of Analysis, in GFCA, IV, pp. 288-310, 2007, Conceptions of Analysis in the Early Analytic and Phenomenological Traditions: Some Comparisons and Relationships, in AT, 1-2 (pp.197-204), 2009, Analysis, in The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy, online at: plato.stanford.edu/ entries/analysis Dummett, Michael, 1987, Frege and the Paradox of Analysis, in Dummett, Frege and Other Philosophers (Oxford University Press, 1991), pp. 17-52 Reck, Erich, 2005, Frege s Natural Numbers: Motivations and Modifications, in GFCA, III, pp. 270-301 *, 2007, Frege-Russell Numbers: Analysis or Explication, in AT, pp. 33-50 Tappenden, Jamie, 1995, Extending Knowledge and Fruitful Concepts : Fregean Themes in the Foundations of Mathematics, Noûs 29, pp. 427-67; repr. in GFCA, III, pp. 67-114 (8) The problem of identity statements problems in the early notion of conceptual content; the informativeness of identity statements *FR, Introduction, 3, pp. 21-30; Begriffsschrift, 8 (pp. 64-5); Function and Concept, esp. pp. 130-8; On Sinn and Bedeutung (pp. 151-71) Beaney, Michael, FMS, 6.1, 6.2, 2007, Frege s Use of Function-Argument Analysis and his Introduction of Truth-Values as Objects, in Dirk Greimann, ed., Essays on Frege s Conception of Truth, Grazer Philosophische Studien, 75, pp. 93-123 *, F, 5 Kremer, Michael, 2010, Sense and reference: the origins and development of the distinction, in CCF, 1-5 (pp. 220-58) Textor, Mark, FSR, ch. 4 (9) Sense and reference: sentences application of the distinction to sentences; extensional and intensional contexts *FR, Introduction 4 (pp. 36-46; tr. into Chinese, World Philosophy, 2 (2008), pp. 14-24); Letter to Husserl, 24.5.1891 (pp. 149-50); On Sinn and Bedeutung

Frege s philosophy: Course outline and selected reading 6 (pp. 151-71); Letter to Russell, 28.12.1902 (pp. 255-7); Letter to Russell, 13.11.1904 (pp. 290-2); Introduction to Logic (pp. 293-8) Beaney, Michael, FMS, 6.2, 6.5 *, F, 6, 9 Kremer, Michael, 2010, Sense and reference: the origins and development of the distinction, in CCF, 7-8 (pp. 261-78) Taschek, William W., 1992, Frege s Puzzle, Sense, and Information Content, Mind 101, pp. 767-91; repr. in GFCA, IV, pp. 217-44 Textor, Mark, FSR, ch. 6 Weiner, Joan, FE, ch. 6, pp. 89-103 (10) Sense and reference: singular terms application of the distinction to singular terms; senses without referents; referential vs. descriptive theories of proper names *FR, On Sinn and Bedeutung (pp. 151-71); Letter to Russell, 28.12.1902 (pp. 255-7); Letter to Russell, 13.11.1904 (pp. 290-2); Letter to Jourdain, Jan. 1914 (pp. 319-21); App. 2, p. 385 Beaney, Michael, FMS, 6.3, 6.4 *, F, 8 Dummett, Michael, 1981, Frege: Philosophy of Language, 2 nd ed. (Duckworth), chs. 5-6 Hylton, Peter, 2005, Frege and Russell, in Propositions, Functions, Analysis: Selected Essays on Russell s Philosophy (Oxford University Press), pp. 153-84; also in CCF, pp. 509-49 Kremer, Michael, 2010, Sense and reference: the origins and development of the distinction, in CCF, 6 (pp. 258-61) Kripke, Saul, 2008, Frege s Theory of Sense and Reference: Some Exegetical Notes, Theoria, 74, pp. 181-218 Russell, Bertrand, 1919, Introduction to Mathematical Philosophy (George Allen and Unwin), chs. 15-16 Textor, Mark, FSR, ch. 5 (11) Sense and reference: concept words application of the distinction to functional expressions

Frege s philosophy: Course outline and selected reading 7 *FR, Letter to Husserl, 24.5.1891 (pp. 149-50); [Comments on Sinn and Bedeutung] (pp. 172-80) Beaney, Michael, FMS, 7.1 *, F, 7 Textor, Mark, FSR, ch. 7 (12) Indexicality criteria for sameness of thought; the problem of indexicals *FR, Introduction, 3, pp. 30-6; Logic, esp. pp. 227-39; A Brief Survey of my Logical Doctrines (pp. 299-300); Letters to Husserl, 1906 (pp. 301-7); Thought (pp. 325-45) *Beaney, Michael, FMS, 7.4, 7.5, 8.1, F, 9 Perry, John, Frege on Demonstratives, in Palle Yourgrau, ed., Demonstratives (Oxford University Press, 1990), pp. 50-70; orig. in Phil. Rev. 1977, pp. 474-97; repr. in Perry, The Problem of the Essential Indexical and Other Essays (Oxford University Press, 1993), pp. 3-25, The Problem of the Essential Indexical, in Perry, The Problem of the Essential Indexical and Other Essays, pp. 26-49; orig. in Noûs 1979, pp. 3-21 Evans, Gareth, Understanding Demonstratives, in Yourgrau, Demonstratives, pp. 71-96; also in Evans, Collected Papers (Oxford University Press, 1985), pp. 291-321 *Harcourt, Edward, Frege on I, Now, Today and Some Other Linguistic Devices, Synthese, 1999, pp. 329-56; repr. in GFCA, IV, pp. 262-87 (13) Thought and objectivity objectivity and communicability; Platonism about thoughts; compositionality FR, Introduction, 3, pp. 30-1; Logic, esp. pp. 227-39; My Basic Logical Insights (pp. 322-4); Thought (pp. 325-45) Beaney, Michael, FMS, 7.5; ch. 8 Bell, David, 1987, Thoughts, in GFCA, IV, pp. 313-29

Frege s philosophy: Course outline and selected reading 8 Burge, Tyler, 2005, Introduction to Truth, Thought, Reason: Essays on Frege (Oxford University Press), pp. 1-73 Dummett, Michael, 1989, More about Thoughts, in GFCA, IV, pp. 330-50 Heck, Richard and May, Robert, forthcoming, The Composition of Thoughts, Noûs, available at: http://frege.brown.edu/heck/pdf/unpublished/compositionofthoughts.pdf Kremer, Michael, 2010, Sense and reference: the origins and development of the distinction, in CCF, 9 (pp. 278-92) Ricketts, Thomas, 1986, Objectivity and objecthood: Frege s metaphysics of judgment, in GFCA, I, pp. 313-39 Weiner, Joan, FE, ch. 9 (14) Frege and philosophy of language Frege as philosopher of language Beaney, Michael, FMS, ch. 6; 7.4, 7.5; ch. 8 Burge, Tyler, 1990, Frege on Sense and Linguistic Meaning, in David Bell and Neil Cooper, eds., The Analytic Tradition (Blackwell, 1990), pp. 30-60; repr. in Burge, Truth, Thought, Reason: Essays on Frege (Oxford University Press, 2005), pp. 242-69; also repr. in GFCA, IV, pp. 37-67 Heck. Richard, 2010, Frege and semantics, in Dirk Greimann, ed., Essays on Frege s Conception of Truth, Grazer Philosophische Studien, 75, pp. 27-63; also in CCF, pp. 342-78 Ricketts, Thomas, 1986, Generality, Meaning, and Sense in Frege, Pacific Phil. Quar., 67, pp. 172-95; repr. in GFCA, IV, pp. 13-36 Taschek, William W., 2010, On sense and reference: a critical reception, in CCF, pp. 293-341 Weiner, Joan, 1997, Has Frege a Philosophy of Language?, in William W. Tait, ed., Early Analytic Philosophy: Frege, Russell, Wittgenstein (Open Court), pp. 249-72; repr. in GFCA, IV, pp. 97-123, FE, ch. 10 Mike Beaney May 2011