Clarence Irving Lewis

Clarence Irving Lewis (April 12, 1883 - February 3, 1964) was a pragmatist philosopher. Born Stoneham, Massachusetts, Lewis was educated at Harvard University, studying logic under Josiah Royce, and taught there from 1920 until his retirement in 1953. He died in Cambridge, Massachusetts. Alongside his work in epistemology and ethics, Lewis was a supporter of bayesian probability and a pioneer of modal logic. His study of the Principia Mathematica of Bertrand Russell and Alfred North Whitehead led him to develop his own alternative system of logic. He was also the first to use the term "qualia" in its generally-agreed upon modern sense. His publications include:
  • A Survey of Symbolic Logic (1918)
  • Mind and World Order: Outline of a Theory of Knowledge (1929)
  • Symbolic Logic (1932), with C H Langford
  • An Analysis of Knowledge and Valuation (1947)
  • The Ground and Nature of Right (1955)
  • Our Social Inheritance (1957)
Lewis, Clarence Irving Lewis, Clarence Irving Lewis, Clarence Irving Lewis, Clarence Irving Lewis, Clarence Irving

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
black faced woodswallow
florinda meza
hms revenge
sam spade
1840 in science
bash.org
lemonade
arbetarmakt
patterson's curse (band)
el siddiq
1841 in science
walloon
house wren
broken arrow
castle morpeth
elizabeth fraser
vale of white horse
rock wren
1842 in science
alloy language
walter a. shewhart
mick goodrick
genootskap vir regte afrikaners
coordinates (elementary mathematics)
william hopkins
khalid bin walid
james p. hoffa
martin o'neill
thomas beckington
shahzadi
paul stacey
oc
new ross
john stafford
martin o'neill (footballer)
cal poly
frank rudolph wolf
muhammad bin qasim
spitball
al hajjaj bin yousef
marwari language
balbriggan
eric cantor
north east mrt line