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Lars Hertzberg

Åbo Akademi University
  •  Home
  •  Publications
    80
    • Most Recent
    • Most Downloaded
    • Topics
  •  Events
    1
  •  News and Updates
    64

 More details
  • Åbo Akademi University
    Department of Philosophy
    Professor Emeritus
Cornell University
Sage School of Philosophy
PhD, 1970
Turku, Finland
Areas of Interest
Philosophy of Language
Philosophy of Mind
Logic and Philosophy of Logic
Philosophy, Miscellaneous
  • All publications (80)
  • Var Wittgenstein moralfilosof?
    Norsk Filosofisk Tidsskrift 1. 1997.
  •  107
    The Indeterminacy of the Mental
    with Jenny Teichman
    Aristotelian Society Supplementary Volume 57 (1). 1983.
    IndeterminacyEpistemology of MindThe Indeterminacy of Translation
  •  1
    Rom Harre and Michael Krausz, Varieties of Relativism
    Philosophical Investigations 22 197-202. 1999.
    Relativism
  •  42
    Logi Gunnarsson, Wittgensteins Leiter . 119 pp (review)
    SATS 3 (2): 167-172. 2002.
    German PhilosophyJürgen Habermas
  •  107
    On Being Moved by Desire
    Philosophical Investigations 18 (3): 250-263. 1995.
    Desire
  • GH von Wright on Goodness and Justice
    Acta Philosophica Fennica 77 89. 2005.
  •  145
    Wittgenstein’s Metaphysics
    with John W. Cook
    Philosophical Review 107 (1): 163. 1998.
    Which famous twentieth-century philosopher instigated a revolution in philosophy, arguing that the philosopher’s business is not to advance general theories about reality, but rather to help release our thinking from the intellectual cramps produced by a misunderstanding of the forms of language? Wittgenstein? Wrong! according to John W. Cook. This revolution in philosophy actually had no author. Apparently, it arose through a misinterpretation of Wittgenstein’s later writings. In fact, Cook imp…Read more
    Which famous twentieth-century philosopher instigated a revolution in philosophy, arguing that the philosopher’s business is not to advance general theories about reality, but rather to help release our thinking from the intellectual cramps produced by a misunderstanding of the forms of language? Wittgenstein? Wrong! according to John W. Cook. This revolution in philosophy actually had no author. Apparently, it arose through a misinterpretation of Wittgenstein’s later writings. In fact, Cook implies, Wittgenstein himself was not genuinely engaged in a struggle with philosophical puzzles, but rather had an ontological theory up his sleeve: he was a conventional empiricist in the tradition of Berkeley, Ernst Mach, and Russell, though he happened to express himself so obscurely that some philosophers, believing themselves inspired by his writings, dreamed up the whole revolution by mistake, as it were. However, Cook is not arguing that the revolution should be canceled; rather he looks at Wittgenstein’s work from the standpoint of that accidental revolution, berating Wittgenstein, as it were, for not having thought to be a Wittgensteinian himself.
    Ludwig Wittgenstein
  •  142
    The sense is where you find it
    In Timothy McCarthy & Sean C. Stidd (eds.), Wittgenstein in America, Oxford University Press. pp. 90--102. 2001.
    Aspects of Consciousness
  •  85
    Rush Rhees on Philosophy and Religious Discourse
    Faith and Philosophy 18 (4): 431-442. 2001.
    Philosophy of ReligionPhilosophy of Religion, Miscellaneous
  • Om livsbegreppet
    Norsk Filosofisk Tidsskrift 1 (4): 1. 1980.
  •  130
    Imagination and the sense of identity
    In Human Beings, Cambridge University Press. pp. 143-155. 1991.
    Most of us, at one time or another, will have been struck by a thought that we might wish to express in the following words: ‘I could have been born in a different time and place, my position in life and all my personal characteristics could have been completely different from what they are; how amazing then that it should have fallen to my lot to live my life, the only life I shall ever live, as this particular individual rather than any other.’ This thought need not derive from a sense that th…Read more
    Most of us, at one time or another, will have been struck by a thought that we might wish to express in the following words: ‘I could have been born in a different time and place, my position in life and all my personal characteristics could have been completely different from what they are; how amazing then that it should have fallen to my lot to live my life, the only life I shall ever live, as this particular individual rather than any other.’ This thought need not derive from a sense that there is anything unusual about one's life; what it expresses, rather, may be the sense that there is something gratuitous or contingent about one's being any particular individual at all. This sense of contingency might be connected with a feeling of gratitude, perhaps of responsibility towards others less fortunate in life; or it might be bound up with envy, or pride, or self-pity, etc
    Personal Identity, MiscImagination, Misc
  •  78
    Culture and Value/Vermischte Bemerkungen
    Philosophical Investigations 5 (2): 154-163. 1982.
    European PhilosophyBritish PhilosophyAustrian Philosophy
  •  133
    Blame and causality
    Mind 84 (336): 500-515. 1975.
    EthicsMotivation and Will
  • Walking and talking with Georg Henrik Von Wright
    British Philosophy
  •  119
    The Dialectic of Perspectivism, I
    SATS 6 (2): 5-49. 2005.
  •  58
    Review of Keith Dromm, Wittgenstein on Rules and Nature (review)
    Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews 2009 (7). 2009.
    20th Century Philosophy
  • On Being Neighbourly
    In Dewi Zephaniah Phillips & John H. Whittaker (eds.), The possibilities of sense, Palgrave. pp. 24--38. 2002.
  •  98
    Primitive Reactions—Logic or Anthropology?
    Midwest Studies in Philosophy 17 (1): 24-39. 1992.
  • Human Beings
    Cambridge University Press. 1991.
    Imagination, MiscPersonal Identity, Misc
  •  77
    Winch on social interpretation
    Philosophy of the Social Sciences 10 (2): 151-171. 1980.
    Philosophy of Social Science, MiscellaneousPhilosophy of Social Science, General Works
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