Abstract
At the beginning of this century English and Austrian philosophers interacted and influenced one another in a way which has determined much of the later course of philosophy. This chapter examines the interaction, which centres on Brentano, Meinong, Moore, and Russell.
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Notes
Findlay 1952, 13
Chisholm (ed.) 1960, 12 (Editor's Introduction).
This is especially clear if one considers the various continental movements.
For biographical details on Brentano see the works by Kraus and Stumpf in the bibliography.
Brentano 1969, 32f.
Brentano 1968, 151.
Brentano 1968, 20.
Brentano 1975 (written in 1916).
The preface to Bradley's Principles of Logic of 1883 carps at British insularity. 12Kraus 1919, 8.
Brentano 1968, 19. 14Brentano 1956, 241ff.
See Meinong 1921, 96 (1978, 8).
Moore 1903, 115 (1976, 176).
See Levy 1979, 235. 21See Passmore 1966, 200.
Russell 1904, 205 (1973, 22f).
See Meinong 1917, §2.
Meinong 1965, 153.
See the index of Russell 1984 for the topics dealt with.
Moore, 1942, 17.
Sluga 1980 claims a strong influence of Lotze on Frege. Whether there was such a strong connection remains to be decided satisfactorily.
Findlay 1952, 17 and 1963, p. xii.
Ibid.
Findlay 1963, p. xii.
Russell 1959, 100.
Russell 1984, 41ff. 33See Mulligan 1986.
See Brentano 1971,172-9 (1973, 301-306). 35Findlay 1952, 16, 1963, p. xii.
I have this from letters from Rhees to Samuel Alexander which are now in the John Rylands Library, Manchester. When Rhees got back to Cambridge he wrote something to the effect that there were some strange things going on there (1930 or 1931). Can he have meant Wittgenstein?
See the account in Skolimowski 1967.
Lukasiewicz 1913a was the result.
See Chapter 8.
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© 1992 Springer Science+Business Media Dordrecht
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Simons, P. (1992). The Anglo-Austrian Analytic Axis. In: Philosophy and Logic in Central Europe from Bolzano to Tarski. Nijhoff International Philosophy Series, vol 45. Springer, Dordrecht. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-94-015-8094-6_6
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