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Friday, February 14, 2020

H. P. Grice and M. Sainsbury

Mark Sainsbury works principally in philosophy of language. He is the author of the volume on Russell (1979, pb 1985) in the Routledge "Arguments of the Philosophers" series, and also Paradoxes (Cambridge, 1988; 2nd ed. 1995, 3rd ed. 2009), Logical Forms (Blackwell, 1991, 2nd ed. 2000), Departing From Frege (2002), Reference Without Referents (2005, pb 2007), Fiction and Fictionalism (2009) and, with Michael Tye Seven Puzzles of Thought and How to Solve Them: An Originalist Theory of Concepts (2012, pb 2013). His latest work, in press with OUP, is called Thinking About Things, and discusses intentionality and the intensional idioms we use to describe it. He is a Fellow of the British Academy, a Fellow of King's College London, and an Honorary Fellow of Corpus Christi College, Oxford. He was formerly Susan Stebbing Professor of Philosophy at King's College London and, from 1990-2000, editor of Mind.

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