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E-raamat: Actual and the Possible: Modality and Metaphysics in Modern Philosophy

Edited by (Manchester Metropolitan University)
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The Actual and the Possible presents new essays by leading specialists on modality and the metaphysics of modality in the history of modern philosophy from the seventeenth to the twentieth centuries. It revisits key moments in the history of modern modal doctrines, and illuminates lesser-known moments of that history. The ultimate purpose of this historical approach is to contextualise and even to offer some alternatives to dominant positions within the contemporary philosophy of modality. Hence the volume contains not only new scholarship on the early-modern doctrines of Baruch Spinoza, G. W. F. Leibniz, Christian Wolff and Immanuel Kant, but also work relating to less familiar nineteenth-century thinkers such as Alexius Meinong and Jan Lukasiewicz, together with essays on celebrated nineteenth- and twentieth-century thinkers such as G. W. F. Hegel, Martin Heidegger and Bertrand Russell, whose modal doctrines have not previously garnered the attention they deserve. The volume thus covers a variety of traditions, and its historical range extends to the end of the twentieth century, addressing the legacy of W. V. Quine's critique of modality within recent analytic philosophy.
Acknowledgements vii
Note on the Contributors ix
Editor's Introduction 1(10)
1 Aspects of Spinoza's Theory of Essence: Formal Essence, Non-Existence, and Two Types of Actuality
11(34)
Mogens Loerke
2 Wolff's Close Shave with Fatalism
45(19)
Stephan Leuenberger
3 Modal Adventures between Leibniz and Kant: Existence and (Temporal, Logical, Real) Possibilities
64(30)
Ohad Nachtomy
4 Kant's Material Condition of Real Possibility
94(23)
Jessica Leech
5 Hegel's Expressivist Modal Realism
117(19)
Christopher Yeomans
6 Russell on Modality
136(34)
Thomas Baldwin
7 Modality and Degrees of Truth: An Austro-Polish Sideline in Twentieth-Century Modal Thought
170(16)
Peter Simons
8 Heidegger on `Possibility'
186(31)
Mark Sinclair
9 De Re Modality in the Late Twentieth Century: The Prescient Quine
217(20)
John Divers
Index 237
Mark Sinclair is Senior Lecturer in Philosophy at the Manchester Metropolitan University and Associate Editor at the British Journal for the History of Philosophy. He has published on the history of modern French and German philosophy in Journal of the History of Philosophy, History of Philosophy Quarterly, Archiv für Geschichte der Philosophie, Journal of the History of Ideas and Intellectual History Review. He holds degrees in Philosophy from the University of Warwick, Université Paris Sorbonne and the Manchester Metropolitan University.