Introduction Part I The Armstrong-Place Debate1 DISPOSITIONS AS CATEGORICAL STATES 2 DISPOSITIONS AS INTENTIONAL STATES 3 PLACE’S AND ARMSTRONG’S VIEWS COMPARED AND CONTRASTED 4 A CONCEPTUALIST ONTOLOGY Part II The Martin-Armstrong-Place Debate 5 PROPERTIES AND DISPOSITIONS 6 REPLY TO MARTIN 7 STRUCTURAL PROPERTIES: CATEGORICAL, DISPOSITIONAL OR BOTH? 8 REPLIES TO ARMSTRONG AND PLACE 9 SECOND REPLY TO MARTIN 10 CONCEPTUALISM AND THE ONTOLOGICAL INDEPENDENCE OF CAUSE AND EFFECT 11 FINAL REPLIES TO PLACE AND ARMSTRONG
D M Armstrong (University of Sydney, Emeritus), Professor of Philosophy C B Martin (Formerly University of Calgary), The Late U T Place (University of Leeds (deceased), Professor of Philosophy Tim Crane (University of Cambridge)
`This book furnishes fertile soil within which many different
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`We stongly recommend this book on Dispostions.Each of the three
participants provides very persuassive arguments for different
parts of the full story which seek concerning dispostions. The many
arguments in this book can help to draw a reader, as they have
drawn us, very much closer towards a satisfying understanding of
some of the deepest and most central problems in metaphysics'
'This is a book on one of the most central issues in current
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of the storm ... The many arguments in this book can help to draw a
reader, as they have drawn us, very much closer to a satisfying
understanding of some of the deepest and most central problems in
metaphysics.' - Canadian Journal of Philosophy
'The waters of metaphysics rise ... here in Disposition, are not
one but three grand old men of the sea to pilot us through them.' -
Times Literary Supplement
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