edited by W. H. Capitan and D. D. Merrill
University of Pittsburgh Press, 1966
Cloth: 978-0-8229-4035-7 | eISBN: 978-0-8229-7724-7 | Paper: 978-0-8229-8583-9

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ABOUT THIS BOOK
This volume offers an unusual variety of topics presented during the fifth annual Oberlin Colloquium in Philosophy.  Essays topics include: a dispute of the standard deductivist account of scientific testability; two definitions of “nonsense” that are closely related and correlate to science's concern with truth and philosophy's concern with concepts; contesting the causes of voluntary actions purported in Hart and Honoré's Causation and the Law; distinguishing two kinds of metaphysical tasks-—taxonomic and evaluative; and discussions of “what a thing is” in terms of its qualities and particulars and the distinction between numerical and conceptual differences, universals and individuation.