Analytic Philosophy Books
Showing 1-50 of 1,716
Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus (Paperback)
by (shelved 36 times as analytic-philosophy)
avg rating 4.10 — 22,367 ratings — published 1921
Naming and Necessity (Paperback)
by (shelved 30 times as analytic-philosophy)
avg rating 4.01 — 4,514 ratings — published 1971
Philosophical Investigations (Hardcover)
by (shelved 28 times as analytic-philosophy)
avg rating 4.26 — 15,769 ratings — published 1953
The Problems of Philosophy (Paperback)
by (shelved 24 times as analytic-philosophy)
avg rating 3.90 — 18,612 ratings — published 1912
Language, Truth and Logic (Paperback)
by (shelved 21 times as analytic-philosophy)
avg rating 3.75 — 4,232 ratings — published 1936
On Certainty (Paperback)
by (shelved 16 times as analytic-philosophy)
avg rating 4.16 — 4,976 ratings — published 1969
From a Logical Point of View: Nine Logico-Philosophical Essays (Paperback)
by (shelved 15 times as analytic-philosophy)
avg rating 4.14 — 1,224 ratings — published 1953
Word and Object (Paperback)
by (shelved 14 times as analytic-philosophy)
avg rating 4.01 — 1,750 ratings — published 1960
Philosophy and the Mirror of Nature (Paperback)
by (shelved 14 times as analytic-philosophy)
avg rating 4.03 — 3,290 ratings — published 1979
Reason, Truth and History (Paperback)
by (shelved 11 times as analytic-philosophy)
avg rating 3.87 — 314 ratings — published 1981
Wittgenstein on Rules and Private Language: An Elementary Exposition (Paperback)
by (shelved 11 times as analytic-philosophy)
avg rating 4.04 — 1,083 ratings — published 1982
Culture and Value (Paperback)
by (shelved 10 times as analytic-philosophy)
avg rating 4.08 — 1,944 ratings — published 1977
Philosophical Analysis in the Twentieth Century, Volume 1: The Dawn of Analysis (Paperback)
by (shelved 10 times as analytic-philosophy)
avg rating 4.09 — 95 ratings — published 2003
How to Do Things with Words (Paperback)
by (shelved 10 times as analytic-philosophy)
avg rating 3.90 — 2,611 ratings — published 1955
Ontological Relativity and Other Essays (Paperback)
by (shelved 10 times as analytic-philosophy)
avg rating 4.05 — 198 ratings — published 1969
Analytic Philosophy: A Very Short Introduction (Kindle Edition)
by (shelved 9 times as analytic-philosophy)
avg rating 3.81 — 196 ratings — published 2017
Empiricism and the Philosophy of Mind (Paperback)
by (shelved 9 times as analytic-philosophy)
avg rating 4.27 — 345 ratings — published 1956
On the Plurality of Worlds (Paperback)
by (shelved 9 times as analytic-philosophy)
avg rating 4.17 — 509 ratings — published 1985
Intention (Paperback)
by (shelved 9 times as analytic-philosophy)
avg rating 4.04 — 418 ratings — published 1963
The Logical Structure of the World and Pseudoproblems in Philosophy (Open Court Classics)
by (shelved 9 times as analytic-philosophy)
avg rating 3.91 — 185 ratings — published 1928
The Foundations of Arithmetic: A Logico-Mathematical Enquiry into the Concept of Number (Paperback)
by (shelved 9 times as analytic-philosophy)
avg rating 4.20 — 1,016 ratings — published 1884
The Blue and Brown Books (Paperback)
by (shelved 9 times as analytic-philosophy)
avg rating 4.13 — 2,443 ratings — published 1935
What is Analytic Philosophy? (Paperback)
by (shelved 8 times as analytic-philosophy)
avg rating 4.01 — 69 ratings — published 2008
After Virtue (Paperback)
by (shelved 8 times as analytic-philosophy)
avg rating 4.18 — 6,379 ratings — published 1982
Why I Am Not a Christian and Other Essays on Religion and Related Subjects (Paperback)
by (shelved 8 times as analytic-philosophy)
avg rating 4.00 — 22,367 ratings — published 1957
The Logic of Scientific Discovery (Paperback)
by (shelved 8 times as analytic-philosophy)
avg rating 4.03 — 5,449 ratings — published 1934
Ludwig Wittgenstein: The Duty of Genius (Paperback)
by (shelved 7 times as analytic-philosophy)
avg rating 4.15 — 6,702 ratings — published 1990
Philosophical Troubles (Collected Papers, #1)
by (shelved 7 times as analytic-philosophy)
avg rating 4.12 — 52 ratings — published 2011
Principia Ethica (Paperback)
by (shelved 7 times as analytic-philosophy)
avg rating 3.80 — 1,004 ratings — published 1903
The Concept of Mind (Paperback)
by (shelved 7 times as analytic-philosophy)
avg rating 3.93 — 1,763 ratings — published 1949
Reasons and Persons (Paperback)
by (shelved 7 times as analytic-philosophy)
avg rating 4.26 — 1,888 ratings — published 1984
A Theory of Justice (Paperback)
by (shelved 7 times as analytic-philosophy)
avg rating 3.95 — 13,583 ratings — published 1971
Introduction to Mathematical Philosophy (Paperback)
by (shelved 7 times as analytic-philosophy)
avg rating 4.04 — 1,562 ratings — published 1918
Against Method (Paperback)
by (shelved 6 times as analytic-philosophy)
avg rating 4.02 — 3,526 ratings — published 1975
On Sense and Reference (Unknown Binding)
by (shelved 6 times as analytic-philosophy)
avg rating 3.81 — 309 ratings — published
Origins of Analytical Philosophy (Hardcover)
by (shelved 6 times as analytic-philosophy)
avg rating 3.98 — 61 ratings — published 1993
The Web of Belief (Paperback)
by (shelved 6 times as analytic-philosophy)
avg rating 3.83 — 241 ratings — published 1978
Contingency, Irony, and Solidarity (Paperback)
by (shelved 6 times as analytic-philosophy)
avg rating 4.14 — 2,276 ratings — published 1989
The Structure of Scientific Revolutions (Paperback)
by (shelved 6 times as analytic-philosophy)
avg rating 4.03 — 29,896 ratings — published 1962
Studies in the Way of Words (Paperback)
by (shelved 6 times as analytic-philosophy)
avg rating 4.10 — 116 ratings — published 1989
Mysticism and Logic (Paperback)
by (shelved 6 times as analytic-philosophy)
avg rating 3.77 — 1,099 ratings — published 1910
Pursuit of Truth (Paperback)
by (shelved 5 times as analytic-philosophy)
avg rating 3.87 — 158 ratings — published 1990
Science Without Numbers: The Defence of Nominalism (Princeton Legacy Library, 1898)
by (shelved 5 times as analytic-philosophy)
avg rating 4.41 — 44 ratings — published 1980
The View From Nowhere (Paperback)
by (shelved 5 times as analytic-philosophy)
avg rating 3.99 — 1,200 ratings — published 1986
A Brief History of Analytic Philosophy: From Russell to Rawls (Paperback)
by (shelved 5 times as analytic-philosophy)
avg rating 4.18 — 110 ratings — published 2012
Two Dogmas of Empiricism (Unknown Binding)
by (shelved 5 times as analytic-philosophy)
avg rating 4.04 — 173 ratings — published
Logicomix: An Epic Search for Truth (Paperback)
by (shelved 5 times as analytic-philosophy)
avg rating 4.06 — 20,625 ratings — published 2009
Writing the Book of the World
by (shelved 5 times as analytic-philosophy)
avg rating 4.14 — 43 ratings — published 2011
Our Knowledge of the External World (Paperback)
by (shelved 5 times as analytic-philosophy)
avg rating 4.00 — 354 ratings — published 1914
An Introduction to Non-Classical Logic - From If to Is (Paperback)
by (shelved 5 times as analytic-philosophy)
avg rating 4.15 — 136 ratings — published 2001
“For Frege, an account of what it is for a purely logical power to be in act suffices to allow us to achieve a proper philosophical appreciation of what “content,” “object,” “thought,” “judgment,” and “truth,” as such, are. These notions come to be fully in place through an elucidation of that power, considered apart from our capacity to arrive at kinds of knowledge that are not purely logical in content. Our capacity for empirical judgment, when it comes into view, will come into view as a comparatively complex joint exercise of a variety of faculties, in which the logically fundamental notions that figure in its explication (“content,” “object,” thought,” “judgment,” “truth”) are still supposed to retain the specific sense originally conferred upon them in our explication of the purely logical case, while allowing for their extension to logically impure cases of thought and proposition.
A certain picture of the role of reflection on the purely logical case, inthe order of explication of kinds of knowledge, is at work here—a picture that has been enormously influential on the subsequent development of analytic philosophy. On this picture, only if we are armed with a prior account of the case of purely logical thought, supplementing it as we go along, can we come to understand what empirically contentful theoretical thought (or practical thought) is. On this picture, the spatiotemporal bearing and the self-consciousness of the thinking subject do not belong to the form of thought (and hence their treatment does not belong, as Kant held, to a suitably capacious conception of philosophical logic); rather, all such further details among various species of thought are to be subsequently specified, if at all, through the introduction of further indices figuring within the content of thought. (Thoughts are simply conceived of as occurring at a time or at a person.) These consequences of the Fregean picture are not, on the whole, something for which post-Fregean analytic philosophers argue. Rather, it involves an entire philosophical picture that is simply tacitly, and largely unwittingly, assumed—a picture that is already under attack, albeit in very different ways, in both Kant and early Wittgenstein. According to this post-Fregean picture, we can furnish an account of the wider reaches of our capacity for finite theoretical cognition only by assuming the prior intelligibility of some self- standing account of how one of the ingredient capacities in empirical cognition—the capacity for logical thought—off its own bat is able to yield a delimitable sphere of truth-evaluable, object-related thoughts with judgable content, without its yet having entered into any form of co- operation with our other cognitive capacities.”
― The Logical Alien: Conant and His Critics
A certain picture of the role of reflection on the purely logical case, inthe order of explication of kinds of knowledge, is at work here—a picture that has been enormously influential on the subsequent development of analytic philosophy. On this picture, only if we are armed with a prior account of the case of purely logical thought, supplementing it as we go along, can we come to understand what empirically contentful theoretical thought (or practical thought) is. On this picture, the spatiotemporal bearing and the self-consciousness of the thinking subject do not belong to the form of thought (and hence their treatment does not belong, as Kant held, to a suitably capacious conception of philosophical logic); rather, all such further details among various species of thought are to be subsequently specified, if at all, through the introduction of further indices figuring within the content of thought. (Thoughts are simply conceived of as occurring at a time or at a person.) These consequences of the Fregean picture are not, on the whole, something for which post-Fregean analytic philosophers argue. Rather, it involves an entire philosophical picture that is simply tacitly, and largely unwittingly, assumed—a picture that is already under attack, albeit in very different ways, in both Kant and early Wittgenstein. According to this post-Fregean picture, we can furnish an account of the wider reaches of our capacity for finite theoretical cognition only by assuming the prior intelligibility of some self- standing account of how one of the ingredient capacities in empirical cognition—the capacity for logical thought—off its own bat is able to yield a delimitable sphere of truth-evaluable, object-related thoughts with judgable content, without its yet having entered into any form of co- operation with our other cognitive capacities.”
― The Logical Alien: Conant and His Critics
“وفوق ذلك، وجدت أنه لولا دراستي للطب لما كان لي أن أستطيع التعاطي مع الفلسفة الحديثة خصوصا الأنجلوسكسونية، فلولا معرفتي بالبيولوجيا وعلوم الأعصاب والفسيولوجيا لما كان لي أن أتعامل نقديا مع فلسفة العقل، وأن أفهم كثيرا من قضايا فلسفة العلوم .. وصرت مقتنعا أن تعلق العرب بالفلسفة القارية، الألمانية والفرنسية تحديدا، يعود في جزء كبير منه إلى ضعف الخلفية العلمية لمهتمين بالفلسفة أو لانعدامها، ولذا فهم لا يقتربون من الفلسفة الأنجلوسكسونية التي استفادت كثيرا من العلم الحديث ولا يكاد يمكن التعاطي معها لمن لا يمتلك معرفة علمية جيدة ..”
―
―

