Fülszöveg
Also by Rudolf Carnap
THE LOGICAL STRUCTURE OF THE WORLD
and
PSEUDOPROBLEMS IN PHILOSOPHY
The first, most ambitious in scope and most readable of Camap's major treatises. It is published now, nearly forty years from its first appearance, in an excellent translation by Rolf A. George together with a briefer work Pseudoproblems in Philosophy, which succinctly presents some of its main theses and draws some highly positivistic conclusions from them about the dependence of meaning on verifiability.' - ANTHONY QUINTON, Spectator
Two books in the International Library of Psychology, Philosophy and Scientific Method
THE LANGUAGE AND THOUGHT OF THE CHILD
Jean Piaget
'Jean Piaget breaks startling new ground by showing us how a child's grasp of concepts develops as inevitably as his bones.' - Observer
Also available in paperback
THE MEANING OF MEANING
A Study of the Influence of Language upon Thought and of the Science of Symbolism
C. K. Ogden and I. A. Richards
With...
Tovább
Fülszöveg
Also by Rudolf Carnap
THE LOGICAL STRUCTURE OF THE WORLD
and
PSEUDOPROBLEMS IN PHILOSOPHY
The first, most ambitious in scope and most readable of Camap's major treatises. It is published now, nearly forty years from its first appearance, in an excellent translation by Rolf A. George together with a briefer work Pseudoproblems in Philosophy, which succinctly presents some of its main theses and draws some highly positivistic conclusions from them about the dependence of meaning on verifiability.' - ANTHONY QUINTON, Spectator
Two books in the International Library of Psychology, Philosophy and Scientific Method
THE LANGUAGE AND THOUGHT OF THE CHILD
Jean Piaget
'Jean Piaget breaks startling new ground by showing us how a child's grasp of concepts develops as inevitably as his bones.' - Observer
Also available in paperback
THE MEANING OF MEANING
A Study of the Influence of Language upon Thought and of the Science of Symbolism
C. K. Ogden and I. A. Richards
With supplementary essays by B. Malinowski and F. G. Crookshank 'The authors attack the problem from a more fundamental point of view than that from which others have dealt with it. The importance of their work is obvious. It is a book for educationalists, grammarians, logicians, and, above all, psychologists. Full of interest and valuable matter it is written with admirable clarity and a strong sense of humour, making it not only profitable, but also highly entertaining reading.' - New Statesman
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