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Now showing 1 - 5 of 8
  • Publication
    Francesco Berto, L'esistenza non è logica. Dal quadrato rotondo ai mondi impossibili, Laterza, Roma-Bari, 2010, pp. 310
    (EUT Edizioni Università di Trieste, 2011)
    Vaselli, Stefano
    According W. V. O Quine, there are two famous aphorisms or capital maxims - maybe it could be more correct to define them, with hegelian style, "panlogisms" - derivable from an attentive analysis of his famous problem "On what there is" - both settled on the Parmenis' intuition in virtue of which "All is Being" or "The Being is the Identical": « To be is being the value of a variable» and «No entity without identity». These words summarize, using Francesco Berto introducing words of his «L'Esistenza non è logica; dai quadrati rotondi ai mondi impossibili», the so-called "Received View" about being conceived as something that cannot be (considered) as a logical property inter alia. But the parmenidean-eleatic received view of Quine and others (see the classical criticism against Meinong from B. Russell, or P. Van Inwangen, W. Lycan) is really philosophically satisfactory? All Francesco Berto's book consists in to furnish an absolutely negative answer to the latter question; and this negative question is in turn respectively articulated in two philosophical proposals: a "pars destruens" where, all the parmenidean, russellian, guinean received view's criticisms, limits, metaphysical and logical deficits are stressed, highlighted and stigmatized; and a pars costruendo, in which the author exposes four types of meinonghian "being-as-a-property" theory, openly showing his preference for the last and four theory. In the same words of Berto: «In my view, parmenidean thesis, is wrong [...], and showing, in this book, that opposite view is handsome and useful is for myself more interesting that to criticize received view».
      155  126
  • Publication
    John R. Searle, Making the Social World: The Structure of Human Civilization, Oxford University Press, 2010, pp. 208
    (EUT Edizioni Università di Trieste, 2011)
    Terravecchia, Gian Paolo
    The paper presents and discusses the main results of Making the social world, the book published by John R. Searle in 2010. Social philosophy or, as the author prefers to say, «Philosophy of Society» is the main topic of the book. Sociality, claims Searle, is created and maintained by collective intentionality trough the speech act of Assignment of Function (“We make it the case by Declaration that the Y status function exists in contexts C”). The two final chapters apply the main ideas of the book to important topics, such as Power and Human Rights. This leads the discussion to the field of political philosophy. The final section of the paper presents some critics to the book.
      132  140
  • Publication
    Logica deontica
    (EUT Edizioni Università di Trieste, 2011)
    Pizzo, Alessandro
    Deontic Logic, founded by Georg Henrik von Wright in 1951, has a strong relationship with analytic philosophy. In fact, it is usually considered as a logic of language’s normative uses. Its evolution across the centuries, although, is not clear at all nor free from uncertainty. Rather it shows a particular development path: from a logic of enunciative moods to a logic of practical rationality
      118  226
  • Publication
    Significato, uso e inferenza
    (EUT Edizioni Università di Trieste, 2011)
    Gusmano, Francesco
    The meanings of the words are not mysterious or abstract entities, placed in an unknown and indefinable space. Indeed, they are to be found in the daily practices of speech. The language serves to communicate own impressions, to convey own thoughts. Therefore, its meaning can not in any way be detached from concrete dimension of speaking. Two possible outcomes of such an approach to the problem of meaning are the theory of meaning as use and the theory of meaning as inference. According to the first conception, of which Wittgenstein is one of the leading exponents, the meaning of the words consists in their daily use, in the manner in which they are used and understood in the everyday conversation. Thus, to know the meaning is equivalent to master the rules of use of the words in the context of speech, within the concrete dimension that Wittgenstein defines with the notion of “language game”. According to the second conception, due to Wilfrid Sellars, the rules of use are analyzed in terms of inferential processes; hence, master a rule is to be able to developing all the implications that the words between them have.
      129  192
  • Publication
    Michael Potter, Wittgenstein's Notes on Logic, New York, Oxford University Press, 2009, (pp. xii + 310)
    (EUT Edizioni Università di Trieste, 2011)
    Mezzadri, Daniele
    This review critically discusses Michael Potter’s book on Wittgenstein’s pre-Tractatus work the Notes on Logic. It concentrates on his reading of Wittgenstein’s account of the nature of the proposition and on his interpretation of Wittgenstein’s earliest insights about the nature of logic.
      61  112