Identity and Discrimination

Identity and Discrimination

Identity and Discrimination

paperback
Published: 8 March, 2013
Standard worldwide delivery by Mon, July 6 - Wed, July 15
Order within 0
Condition: NEW
$31.29
RRP $33.22
You save $1.93 (6%)
Price includes shipping
Available 20+ in stock
- +
FREE Returns within 30 days

Description

Identity and Discrimination

This updated edition of Identity and Discrimination, first published in 1990 and the first book by well-known philosopher Timothy Williamson, is now reissued with the inclusion of significant new material. This major work – influential in philosophy of perception and the theory of vagueness – continues in an original and rigorous way to highlight the necessity of discrimination and the thresholds which determine the approximate criteria of identity.

Williamson’s proposal for an original and rigorous theory links identity, a relation central to metaphysics, and indiscriminability, a relation central to epistemology. He provides a distinctive cognitive account of the nature of discrimination, with important applications to the philosophy of perception and the theory of vagueness. The book pioneers the use of epistemic logic to solve the notorious paradoxes of indiscriminability, and develops the application of techniques from mathematical logic to understand issues about identity over time and across possible worlds.

See more

More Details

Type Book
ISBN13 9781118432594
ISBN10 1118432592
Number Of Pages 208
Item Weight 259 g
Product Dimensions 152 x 230 x 8 mm
Publisher / Reseller John Wiley and Sons Ltd
Format paperback
Edition Reissued and Updated Edition
See More +

Author's Bio

Timothy Williamson is the Wykeham Professor of Logic at the University of Oxford. He has previously taught at the University of Edinburgh, Trinity College Dublin, and as a visitor at MIT, Princeton, the Australian National University, the Chinese University of Hong Kong. He is the author of Vagueness (1994), Knowledge and its Limits (2000), The Philosophy of Philosophy (Blackwell, 2007), and Modal Logic as Metaphysics (2013). He is a Fellow of the British Academy and a Foreign Honorary Member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences.

Show more