Volume 10 in a series of 10, this concentrates on the philosophy of the English-speaking world in the Twentieth Century: meaning, knowledge and value.
Introduction John V Cranfield 1. Philosophy of language A.P. Martinich, University of Texas at Austin 2. Formally orientated work in the philosophy of language Nino Cocchiarella, Indiana University 3. Metaphysics I (1900-1945) William DeAngelis, Northeastern University 4. Metaphysics II (1945-present) Bernard Linsky, University of Alberta 5. Ethics I (1900-45) Michael Stingl, University of Lethbridge 6. Ethics II (1945-present) Robert Arrington, Georgia State University 7. Epistemology (1900-present) Paul K. Moser, Loyola University of Chicago 8. The later Wittgenstein John V. Canfield, University of Toronto in Mississauga 9. Political philosophy Arthur Ripstein, University of Toronto 10. Feminist philosophy Marilyn Frye, Michigan State University 11. Philosophy of law Calvin Normore, University of Toronto 12. Applied ethics Justin Oakley, Monash University 13. Aesthetics George Dickie, University of Chicago at Illinois 14. Philosophy of religion Edward Wierenga, University of Rochester
John V. Cranfield lives in Toronto. He has taught philosophy at Cornell University and the University of Toronto, and is the author of Wittgenstein: Language and World (1981) and The Looking-Glass Self (1990). He is currently working on Wittgenstein's private language argument.