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32Chapter Nine. Some Relatively Easy ProblemsIn Michael Forster (ed.), Kant and Skepticism, Princeton University Press. pp. 55-57. 2010.
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162. The Sense in Which Grammar Is ArbitraryIn Wittgenstein on the Arbitrariness of Grammar, Princeton University Press. pp. 21-65. 2004.
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29Appendix. The Philosophical InvestigationsIn Wittgenstein on the Arbitrariness of Grammar, Princeton University Press. pp. 189-192. 2004.
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14NotesIn Michael Forster (ed.), Kant and Skepticism, Princeton University Press. pp. 93-148. 2010.
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82Hegel and SkepticismPhilosophical Review 101 (2): 401. 1992.This is a review of Forster's book.
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145Herder’s Philosophy of Language, Interpretation, and Translation: Three Fundamental PrinciplesReview of Metaphysics 56 (2). 2002.A GOOD CASE COULD BE MADE that Herder is the founder not only of the modern philosophy of language but also of the modern philosophy of interpretation and translation and that he has many things to say on these subjects from which we may still learn today. This essay will not attempt to make such a case, but it will be concerned with some aspects of Herder’s position that would be central to it: three fundamental principles in his philosophy of language which also play fundamental roles in his t…Read more
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