1st Edition

Metametaphysics and the Sciences Historical and Philosophical Perspectives

Edited By Frode Kjosavik, Camilla Serck-Hanssen Copyright 2020
    300 Pages
    by Routledge

    300 Pages
    by Routledge

     This collection addresses metaphysical issues at the intersection between philosophy and science. A unique feature is the way in which it is guided both by history of philosophy, by interaction between philosophy and science, and by methodological awareness. In asking how metaphysics is possible in an age of science, the contributors draw on philosophical tools provided by three great thinkers who were fully conversant with and actively engaged with the sciences of their day: Kant, Husserl, and Frege.

    Part I sets out frameworks for scientifically informed metaphysics in accordance with the meta-metaphysics outlined by these three self-reflective philosophers. Part II explores the domain for co-existent metaphysics and science. Constraints on ambitious critical metaphysics are laid down in close consideration of logic, meta-theory, and specific conditions for science. Part III exemplifies the role of language and science in contemporary metaphysics. Quine’s pursuit of truth is analysed; Cantor’s absolute infinitude is reconstrued in modal terms; and sense is made of Weyl’s take on the relationship between mathematics and empirical aspects of physics.



    With chapters by leading scholars, Metametaphysics and the Sciences is an in-depth resource for researchers and advanced students working within metaphysics, philosophy of science, and the history of philosophy.

    Preface





    Introduction



    Frode Kjosavik and Camilla Serck-Hanssen





    Part I: Metametaphysics: The Very Possibility of Metaphysics





    1. Kant on Method and Evidence in Metaphysics



    Frode Kjosavik



    2. Essence, Nature, and the Possibility of Metaphysics



    Houston Smit



    3. Towards a Husserlian (Meta-)Metaphysics



    Christian Beyer



    4. Frege on "Es gibt," Being in a Realm, and (Meta-)Ontology



    Leila Haaparanta





    Part II: Critical Metaphysics: The Scope and Limits of Metaphysics





    5. Thinking-the-world. Science, philosophy, and religion’s threefold quest for the one infinitary Ur-Being



    Joseph Almog and Olli Koistinen



    6. Kant’s Metaphysics of Nature and Freedom



    Michael Friedman



    7. From Nothing to Something – Why Metaphysics Cannot Be Reduced to Logic



    Camilla Serck-Hanssen



    8. Transcendentally Idealistic Metaphysics and Counterfactual Transcendental Arguments



    Toni Kannisto



    9. Phenomenology as Constitutive Realism



    David Woodruff Smith



    10. Husserl on ‘Besinnung’ and Formal Ontology



    Mirja Hartimo





    Part III: Contemporary Metaphysics: The Role of Language and Science





    11. Quine on Truth and Metaphysics



    Charles Parsons



    12. The Paradox of the Largest Number: From Aristotle to Cantor



    Øystein Linnebo



    13. Symbolic Construction from the "Purely Infinitesimal": Gauge Invariance, Lie Algebras, and Metaphysics chez Hermann Weyl



    Thomas Ryckman

    Biography

    Frode Kjosavik is Professor of Philosophy at the Norwegian University of Life Sciences. He was a group leader in Philosophy at the Centre for Advanced Study at the Norwegian Academy of Science and Letters, 2015/16. He is the co-editor, with Christian Beyer and Christel Fricke, of Husserl’s Phenomenology of Intersubjectivity: Historical Interpretations and Contemporary Applications (Routledge, 2019).





    Camilla Serck-Hanssen is Professor of Philosophy at the University of Oslo, Norway. She was a group leader in Philosophy at the Centre for Advanced Study at the Norwegian Academy of Science and Letters, 2015/16. She is now the Scientific Director of the Centre. She is also co-leader of ConceptLab at the University of Oslo.