260 Pages
    by Routledge

    260 Pages
    by Routledge

    Since its publication in 1959, Individuals has become a modern philosophical classic. Bold in scope and ambition, it continues to influence debates in metaphysics, philosophy of logic and language, and epistemology. Peter Strawson's most famous work, it sets out to describe nothing less than the basic subject matter of our thought. It contains Strawson's now famous argument for descriptive metaphysics and his repudiation of revisionary metaphysics, in which reality is something beyond the world of appearances.
    Throughout, Individuals advances some highly influential and controversial ideas, such as 'non-solipsistic consciousness' and the concept of a person a 'primitive concept'

    Part 1 Particulars; Chapter 1 Bodies; Chapter 2 Sounds; Chapter 3 Persons; Chapter 4 Monads; Part 2 Logical Subjects; Chapter 5 Subject and Predicate (1): Two Criteria; Chapter 6 Subject and Predicate (2): Logical Subjects and Particular Objects; Chapter 7 Language without Particulars; Chapter 8 Logical Subjects and Existence;

    Biography

    P.F Strawson taught at the University of Oxford from 1947, becoming Waynflete Professor of Metaphysical Philosophy in 1968. He retired in 1987 and is now Honorary Fellow of Magdalen College. He is also the author of The Bounds of Sense: An Essay on Kant's Critique of Pure Reason, published by Routledge.

    'This is a book of quite unusual interest and importance, which is likely greatly to influence philosophical discussion on the same and related topics for some time to come...It is a book to read and re-read by anyone with an interest in philosophy.' - Mind