• PhilPapers
  • PhilPeople
  • PhilArchive
  • PhilEvents
  • PhilJobs
  • Sign in
PhilPeople
 
  • Sign in
  • News Feed
  • Find Philosophers
  • Departments
  • Radar
  • Help
 
profile-cover
Drag to reposition
profile picture

Christopher Hookway

University of Sheffield
  •  Home
  •  Publications
    190
    • Most Recent
    • Most Downloaded
    • Topics
  •  Events
    6
  •  News and Updates
    48

 More details
  • University of Sheffield
    Department of Philosophy
    Retired faculty
Areas of Interest
Epistemology
17th/18th Century Philosophy
Philosophy of the Americas
  • All publications (190)
  •  24
    Notebook: Notebook
    Philosophy 59 (229): 425-426. 1984.
    //static.cambridge.org/content/id/urn%3Acambridge.org%3Aid%3Aarticle%3AS003181910007011X/resource/name/firstPage-S003181910007011Xa.jpg.
  •  43
    Naturalism and rationality
    Poznan Studies in the Philosophy of the Sciences and the Humanities 70 35-56. 2000.
    Science, Logic, and MathematicsGeneral Philosophy of Science, Miscellaneous
  •  124
    Review article: Ethics and the pragmatist enlightenment
    Journal of Moral Philosophy 3 (2): 231-236. 2006.
    Value TheorySocial and Political Philosophy
  •  306
    Affective states and epistemic immediacy
    Metaphilosophy 34 (1-2): 78-96. 2003.
    Ethics studies the evaluation of actions, agents and their mental states and characters from a distinctive viewpoint or employing a distinctive vocabulary. And epistemology examines the evaluation of actions (inquiries and assertions), agents (believers and inquirers), and their states (belief and attitudes) from a different viewpoint. Given this common concern with evaluation, we should surely expect there to be considerable similarities between the issues examined and the ideas employed in the…Read more
    Ethics studies the evaluation of actions, agents and their mental states and characters from a distinctive viewpoint or employing a distinctive vocabulary. And epistemology examines the evaluation of actions (inquiries and assertions), agents (believers and inquirers), and their states (belief and attitudes) from a different viewpoint. Given this common concern with evaluation, we should surely expect there to be considerable similarities between the issues examined and the ideas employed in the two areas. However, when we examine most textbooks in ethics and epistemology, this expectation is not fulfilled. Of course, the vocabularies of evaluation are different: in ethics, we are concerned with issues of right and wrong, virtue and vice, moral obligation, and so on; and in epistemology, it is most commonly assumed that we are interested in whether states count as knowledge or as justified beliefs, with whether beliefs and strategies of belief formation are rational
    Moral EmotionVirtue Epistemology
  •  116
    Unnatural Doubts
    Philosophical Quarterly 43 (172): 389. 1993.
    Skepticism, Misc
  •  73
    Lotze and the Classical Pragmatists
    European Journal of Pragmatism and American Philosophy 1 (1): 44-52. 2009.
    It has been said that, after the fall of modernism, Hermann Lotze (1817-81) reigned as the single most influential philosopher in Germany, perhaps the world” (Sullivan 2008: 2). It is now not easy to take such claims about Lotze seriously, and historical surveys of nineteenth century philosophy treat him as a marginal figure, if they mention him at all. Part of the explanation of this change in his standing becomes clear if we accept Sullivan’s helpful observation that Lotze was a ‘prominent...
    American Pragmatism
  • Peirce-Arg Philosophers
    Routledge. 1985.
    First Published in 1999. Routledge is an imprint of Taylor & Francis, an informa company
    Charles Sanders Peirce
  •  105
    Words and Life, By Hilary Putnam, edited by James Conant. Harvard University press 1994lxxvi + 531 pp. £35.95
    Philosophy 70 (273): 460. 1995.
    Internal Realism
  • The Pragmatic Maxim and the Proof of Pragmatism : After 1903: A Máxima Pragmática e a Prova do Pragmatismo : Depois de 1903
    Cognitio 9 (1). 2008.
    Charles Sanders Peirce
  •  1
    Gilbert Harman, "Change in View" (review)
    Philosophical Quarterly 39 (55): 242. 1989.
    Ethics
  • Prev.
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
  • 6
  • 7
  • Next
PhilPeople logo

On this site

  • Find a philosopher
  • Find a department
  • The Radar
  • Index of professional philosophers
  • Index of departments
  • Help
  • Acknowledgments
  • Careers
  • Contact us
  • Terms and conditions

Brought to you by

  • The PhilPapers Foundation
  • The American Philosophical Association
  • Centre for Digital Philosophy, Western University
PhilPeople is currently in Beta Sponsored by the PhilPapers Foundation and the American Philosophical Association
Feedback