Chapter 1 The Nature of Judgment; Chapter 2 Truth And Falsity; Chapter 3 The Refutation of Idealism; Chapter 4 Sense-Data; Chapter 5 Hume’s Theory Examined; Chapter 6 External and Internal Relations; Chapter 7 A Defence of Common Sense; Chapter 8 Is Existence a Predicate?; Chapter 9 Proof of an External World; Chapter 10 Certainty; Chapter 11 Being Certain that One is in Pain; Chapter 12 Moore’s Paradox; Chapter 13 Letter to Malcolm;
Thomas Baldwin
'Moore was extremely clever ... He never dealt with trivial issues
but only with matters of central philosophical importance. He never
wrote for effect; he never tried to dazzle; his only concern was
with the truth ... Baldwin's selection of writings seems to me
admirable. They include many of his best and most characteristic
things.' - Peter Strawson
'Moore added a dimension of analytical acuteness and precision to
the defense of commom sense that was previously unknown and remains
unexcelled. His clear and profound analyses are a monument to the
power of the human mind to understand itself, the external world,
and relation of one to the other.' - Keith Lehrer, University of
Arizona
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