Wilfrid Sellars made profound and lasting contributions to nearly every area of philosophy. The aim of this collection is to highlight the continuing importance of Sellars work to contemporary debates. The contributors include several luminaries in Sellars scholarship, as well as members of the new generation whose work demonstrates the lasting power of Sellars ideas. Papers by OShea and Koons develop Sellars underexplored views concerning ethics, practical reasoning, and free will, with an emphasis on his longstanding engagement with Kant. Sachs, Hicks and Pereplyotchik relate Sellars views of mental phenomena to current topics in cognitive science and philosophy of mind. Fink, deVries, Price, Macbeth, Christias, and Brandom grapple with traditional Sellarsian themes, including meaning, truth, existence, and objectivity. Brandhoff provides an original account of the evolution of Sellars philosophy of language and his project of pure pragmatics . The volume concludes with an author-meets-critics section centered around Robert Brandoms recent book, From Empiricism to Expressivism: Brandom Reads Sellars, with original commentaries and replies.
Introduction, David Pereplyotchik and Deborah R. Barnbaum
Part I. Ethics, Moral Reasoning, and Free Will
1. Thought, Freedom and Embodiment in Kant and Sellars
James OShea
2. Toward a Sellarsian Ethics for the 21st Century
Jeremy Randel Koons
Part II. Philosophy of Language and Mind
3. Pure Pragmatics and the Phenomenology of Linguistic Functions: On Sellars Non-Factualistic Conception of Philosophy
Boris Brandhoff
4. What Jones Taught the Ryleans: Towards a Sellarsian Metaphysics of Thought
Michael R. Hicks
5. Sellars and Psycholinguistics
David Pereplyotchik&llCÒ