1 INTRODUCTION 2 MEANING FINITISM 3 RULES AS INSTITUTIONS 4 CONSCIENTIOUSNESS 5 RULE SCEPTICISM 6 THE ANALOGY WITH VON MISES 7 INDIVIDUALISM 8 ISOLATION AND INNOVATION 9 RULES AND THE STATE OF NATURE 10 CONCLUSION
David Bloor
'David Bloor's recent book joins the debtaes initiated by Kripke,
and formulates and extremely well argumented and most radical
standpoint taken till now on the so-called collectivist side of the
controversy.'
Bloor's book is an undoubtedly significant contribution to the
ongoing debate.
'The reader will certainly enjoy reading this book, since it is
exceptionally well written, the arguments, most of the time , are
poweerfull, the examples and the historical analogies are
especially intriguning. It can be used equally well for
introductory purposes an as a point of departure in academic
debates.'
'Bloor's book is impressive for the originality of its argument,
which consciously goes beyond Wittgenstein at several points; the
tenacity with which it defends its sociological perspective; and
its creative use of ideas from sociology, moral philosophy, and the
philosophy of science. The text deserves praise for the richness of
its content.' - The Jerusalem Philosophical Quarterly
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