WBUR.ORG
Support WBUR Receive e-Newsletter
Dick Gordon: Host of The ConnectionHome
Home
   
 1/9/2009

How Do I Listen?
Archived programs are streamed in the Real Audio Format.
Click here to download
 
Problems Listening?
Try this Direct Listen Link if the "Listen to Show" button to the right does not work
 

Hosted by: Dick Gordon Show Originally Aired: 1/10/2001
CALL 1 800-423-TALK
The Life and Philosophy of Willard Van Orman Quine
No Image Available


Email to friend

The Harvard philosopher Willard van Orman Quine had the question mark on his typewriter replaced with a logical symbol. Asked by a reporter if he missed the question mark, Quine replied, "I deal in certainties." Quine's certainties were of the scientific sort: he famously said that "philosophy of science is philosophy enough." For Quine, this meant that philosophy had to give up its pretenses and recognize that it had no special claim to truth.

Willard Quine died on Christmas Day at the age of 92. He was one of the 20th Century's greatest thinkers, whose work in logic and epistemology challenged philosophy's perpetual quest for transcendent meaning. The search for truth beyond immediate human experience, Quine thought, was not only pointless, it was actually a barrier to the pursuit of knowledge. The philosophy of Quine, this hour on the Connection
(Hosted by Christopher Lydon)
LISTEN TO SHOW
Related Shows


Professor Compiles Blue Book Bloopers
Here And Now (06/03/2003)

The Columbia Tragedy
The Connection (02/03/2003)

Edward Said Obituary
On Point (09/25/2003)

Middle Eastern Studies: Did it Let the Country Down?
On Point (02/12/2002)

Graduating to a Tight Job Market
Here And Now (05/19/2003)

Reclaiming the Game
Only A Game (10/25/2003)
 



Alexander George, professor of Philosophy at Amherst College

Richard Rorty, professor of Literature at Stanford University
wbur.org    © Copyright 2009. Trustees of Boston University and WBUR