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Naming and Necessity

TLDR
In this paper, the authors make a connection between the mind-body problem and the so-called "identity thesis" in analytic philosophy, which has wide-ranging implications for other problems in philosophy that traditionally might be thought far-removed.
Abstract
I hope that some people see some connection between the two topics in the title. If not, anyway, such connections will be developed in the course of these talks. Furthermore, because of the use of tools involving reference and necessity in analytic philosophy today, our views on these topics really have wide-ranging implications for other problems in philosophy that traditionally might be thought far-removed, like arguments over the mind-body problem or the so-called ‘identity thesis’. Materialism, in this form, often now gets involved in very intricate ways in questions about what is necessary or contingent in identity of properties — questions like that. So, it is really very important to philosophers who may want to work in many domains to get clear about these concepts. Maybe I will say something about the mind-body problem in the course of these talks. I want to talk also at some point (I don’t know if I can get it in) about substances and natural kinds.

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Book ChapterDOI

The Twilight of the Liberal Social Contract : On the Reception of Rawlsian Political Liberalism

Enzo Rossi
TL;DR: Political liberalism is a distinctive account of the normative foundations of liberal institutions and practices, developed by John Rawls and others in the final decades of the twentieth century as mentioned in this paper, and remains a fairly active but hardly dominant research program in political philosophy at the beginning of the twenty-first century.
Journal ArticleDOI

Possibilities and the arguments for origin essentialism

Teresa Robertson
- 01 Oct 1998 - 
TL;DR: In this article, the authors examine the case that has been made for origin essentialism and find it wanting, focusing on the arguments of Nathan Salmon and Graeme Forbes and conclude that both of their arguments fail to respect the intuition that slight variation in the origin of an artifact or organism is possible.
Book ChapterDOI

Post-Gettier Epistemology

Kelly Becker
References
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Counterpart theory and quantified modal logic

TL;DR: JSTOR as discussed by the authors is a not-for-profit organization founded in 1995 to build trusted digital archives for scholarship, which is used to preserve their work and the materials they rely upon, and to build a common research platform that promotes the discovery and use of these resources.
Book

Semantic Analysis

Paul Ziff
Journal ArticleDOI

Ii.—proper names