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  1. Truth and objectivity.Crispin Wright - 1992 - Cambridge: Harvard University Press.
    Recasting important questions about truth and objectivity in new and helpful terms, his book will become a focus in the contemporary debates over realism, and ...
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  • (2 other versions)A Treatise of Human Nature.David Hume & A. D. Lindsay - 1958 - Philosophical Quarterly 8 (33):379-380.
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  • (1 other version)Principia Ethica.George Edward Moore - 1903 - International Journal of Ethics 14 (3):377-382.
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  • Good and Evil.Peter Geach - 1956 - Analysis 17 (2):33 - 42.
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  • Spreading the world.Simon Blackburn - 1984 - Revue Philosophique de la France Et de l'Etranger 176 (3):385-387.
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  • (4 other versions)Language, Truth and Logic.[author unknown] - 1936 - Mind 45 (179):355-364.
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  • Logic Matters.Leslie Stevenson - 1973 - Philosophical Quarterly 23 (93):365-366.
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  • Realism, truth and truth aptness.Frank Jackson - 1994 - Philosophical Books 35 (3):162-169.
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  • The Verbal Icon.W. K. Wimsatt - 1955 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 13 (3):414-414.
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  • Neo-Naturalism and Its Pitfalls.John Cottingham - 1983 - Philosophy 58 (226):455 - 470.
    Naturalism, the purported derivation of values from facts, is a fallacy which stubbornly persists despite all attempts to root it out. And nowadays the naturalists seem to be getting the upper hand. It has become a commonplace of contemporary thinking, both in ethics and the philosophy of science , that the fact-value distinction has ‘broken down’. As early as 1955, J. L. Austin spoke disparagingly of the ‘fact/value fetish’; three years later, Philippa Foot referred to the ‘disappearance’ of the logical (...)
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