Tamas Demeter

Corvinus University of Budapest
  • Hume: Nature
    Philosophical Forum 42 (3): 306-306. 2011.
  •  77
    Daniel Garber, Leibniz: Body, Substance, Monad. Reviewed by
    Philosophy in Review 32 (6): 465-467. 2012.
  • Locke and Metaphors
    S - European Journal for Semiotic Studies 11 (1-3): 75-88. 1999.
  •  77
    Rachel Cohon, Hume's Morality: Feeling and Fabrication (review)
    Philosophy in Review 30 (2): 83-86. 2010.
  • Frank Jackson: From Metaphysics to Ethics: Defence of Conceptual Analysis (review)
    Philosophischer Literaturanzeiger 54 (2). 2001.
  •  124
    This article argues that early modern philosophy should be seen as an integrated enterprise of moral and natural philosophy. Consequently, early modern moral and natural philosophy should be taught as intellectual enterprises that developed hand in hand. Further, the article argues that the unity of these two fields can be best introduced through methodological ideas. It illustrates these theses through a case study on Scottish Newtonianism, starting with visions concerning the unity of philosop…Read more
  •  110
    The search for an image of man
    Studies in East European Thought 62 (2): 155-167. 2010.
    The present paper offers a narrative of the post-World War II development of Hungarian philosophy, and argues that it is characterized by a double, historical and anthropological orientation under Marx’s influence. The resulting amalgam is an intellectual history that looks beyond the ideas themselves, searching for underlying images of man which are represented as ideological backgrounds to theories of nature, society, cognition, etc. The most important works of this approach interpret ideas an…Read more
  •  8
    It is common wisdom in intellectual history that eighteenth-century science of man evolved under the aegis of Newton. It is also frequently suggested that David Hume, one of the most influential practitioners of this kind of inquiry, aspired to be the Newton of the moral sciences. Usually this goes hand in hand with a more or less explicit reading of Hume’s theory of human nature as written in an idiom of particulate inert matter and active forces acting on it, i.e. essentially that of Newton’s …Read more
  •  84
    Introduction
    Studies in East European Thought 64 (1-2): 1-4. 2012.
    In this paper I reconstruct the central concept of the young Lukács’s and Mannheim’s sociology of knowledge, as they present it in their writings in the early decades of the twentieth century. I argue that this concept, namely Weltanschauung, is used to refer to some conceptually unstructured totality of feelings, which they take to be a condition of possibility of intellectual production, and this understanding is contrasted to an alternative construal of the term that presents it as logically …Read more
  •  81
    Essays on Wittgenstein and Austrian Philosophy is presented for the 60th birthday of professor Christoph Nyíri. The essays presented here for the first time are focused on Austrian intellectual history, and on Wittgenstein's philosophy - the two main areas of Professor Nyíri's interests. Typically, the contributors are outstanding scholars of the field, including among others David Bloor, Lee Congdon, Newton Garver, Wilhelm Lütterfields, Joachim Schulte, Barry Smith. The volume is of primary int…Read more
  •  144
    Liberty, necessity and the foundations of Hume’s ‘science of man’
    History of the Human Sciences 25 (1): 15-31. 2012.
    In this article I suggest that section VIII of Hume’s Enquiry Concerning Human Understanding could be read as a contribution to the foundational issues of a characteristic 18th-century enterprise, namely the ‘science of man’. More specifically, it can be read as a summary of his attempt to place this science on an experimental footing, with an awareness of the lessons he has drawn in the previous sections of the Enquiry. This interpretation fits with an overall reading of the work as responding …Read more
  • Meaning and Cartesian Thoughts
    Wittgenstein Jahrbuch 2000 1 49-62. 2001.
  •  185
    Supervenient causation and programme explanation
    Grazer Philosophische Studien 64 (1): 83-93. 2002.
    Frank Jackson, Philip Pettit, and Jaegwon Kim put forward two models of higher-level causal explanation. Advocates of both versions are inclined to draw the conclusion that the models don't differ substantially. I argue, on the contrary, that there are relevant metaphysical differences between Jackson and Pettit's notion of programme explanation on the one hand, and Kim's idea of supervenient causation on the other. These can be traced back to underlying differences between the contents of their…Read more
  • Katalin Neumer: Die Relativität der Grenzen. Studien zur Philosophie Wittgensteins (review)
    Philosophischer Literaturanzeiger 54 (3). 2001.
  •  553
    Folk Psychology Is Not a Metarepresentational Device
    European Journal of Analytic Philosophy 5 (2): 19-38. 2009.
    Here I challenge the philosophical consensus that we use folk psychology for the purposes of metarepresentation. The paper intends to show that folk psychology should not be conceived on par with fact-stating discourses in spite of what its surface semantics may suggest. I argue that folk-psychological discourse is organised in a way and has conceptual characteristics such that it cannot fulfill a fact-stating function. To support this claim I develop an open question argument for psychological …Read more