
Contents
Introduction
Get accessMichael J. Loux is Shuster Professor emeritus in the Department of Philosophy at the University of Notre Dame. He is the author of Substance and Attribute (Reidel: 1979), Ockham's Theory of Terms (Notre Dame: 1974), Primary Ousia (Cornell: 1991), Metaphysics, third edition (Routledge: 2006), Nature, Norm, and Psyche (Scuola Normale Superiore: 2007); editor of Universals and Particulars (Anchor Doubleday: 1971), The Possible and the Actual (Cornell: 1979), The Oxford Handbook of Metaphysics (Oxford: 2003), Metaphysics: Readings, second edition (Routledge: 2008); and the author of numerous articles on topics in metaphysics, the philosophy of language, medieval philosophy, and Aristotle.
Dean Zimmerman is Professor of Philosophy at Rutgers University. His research interests include the nature of time and persistence, and God's relation to temporal things. He is editor or co‐editor of several books in metaphysics and philosophy of religion, including: The Oxford Handbook of Metaphysics (Oxford, 2003), Persons: Human and Divine (Oxford, 2007), Contemporary Debates in Metaphysics (Blackwell, 2007), and the series Oxford Studies in Metaphysics.
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Published:02 September 2009
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Abstract
In both Britain and the United States the revival of metaphysics was gradual. At first, there was a piecemeal character to the work in the field of philosophy. With rare exceptions, philosophers were wary of large-scale metaphysical theories—the construction of comprehensive ontological schemes, theories about the nature of and relations among the most abstract categories under which absolutely everything falls, and the use of this ontological machinery to settle issues about mind–body relations, causation, the philosophy of religion, and so on. Comprehensive, ontology-driven metaphysics was associated with the names of the idealists whom Russell and Moore had effectively defeated.
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