Lexington Books
Pages: 216
Trim: 6 x 9
978-1-4985-4711-6 • Hardback • April 2018 • $105.00 • (£81.00)
978-1-4985-4712-3 • eBook • April 2018 • $99.50 • (£77.00)
Arthur Sullivan is associate professor of philosophy at Memorial University of Newfoundland.
Preface
Part I: Introduction
Chapter 1: A Sketch of the Terrain
Chapter 2: Further Preliminaries
Part II: Key Varieties of Immunity to Counterexample
Chapter 3: Necessity and Analyticity
Chapter 4: A Priori Justification
Part III: Adapting and Applying the Constitutive A Priori Approach
Chapter 5: Two Major Challenges to the A Priori
Chapter 6: Modal Revisionism and Moderate Externalism
Part IV: Mapping Out a Constitutive A Priori View
Chapter 7: Entailments and Conclusions
Bibliography
Index
“This is an outstandingly clear and well informed discussion of a perennial philosophical topic, which covers a variety of approaches in a way that encourages—and exemplifies—open-mindedness. It is good for a solitary reader or for a class and should inspire further thinking about this important notion of being a priori.” -James Cargile, University of Virginia
— James Cargile, University of Virginia
“Sullivan gets the constitutive a priori just right by emphasizing that it is the role that an element of knowledge plays that makes it constitutively a priori, not its content. By discussing the constitutive a priori in the context of the literature in analytic epistemology and semantics, he breaks new ground and shows that the theory meshes nicely with some of the most significant developments in twentieth century philosophy. The book is extremely well written, well documented, and well argued, and it provides an important contribution to the growing literature on the relative, dynamic, or constitutive a priori.” –David J. Stump, University of San Francisco
— David J. Stump, University of San Francisco