 | Crispin Wright
Global Distinguished Professor of Philosophy
Department of Philosophy 5 Washington Place New York, NY 10003
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(212) 995-4179
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M.A., Ph.D., Cambridge; B.Phil., D.Litt., Oxford
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CRISPIN WRIGHT (M.A., Ph.D., Cambridge; B.Phil., D.Litt., Oxford) specializes in the philosophies of language and mathematics, metaphysics and epistemology. He is Wardlaw Professor in the University of St. Andrews, where he directs the Research Centre, Arché. He is a Fellow of the British Academy and of the Royal Society of Edinburgh. He has taught at Columbia, Princeton and Michigan. His books include Wittgenstein on the Foundations of Mathematics (Harvard 1980); Frege's Conception of Numbers as Objects (Humanities Press 1983); Truth and Objectivity (Harvard 1992); Realism Meaning and Truth (2nd. edition Blackwell 1993);The Reason's Proper Study (with Bob Hale, Oxford 2001), Rails to Infinity (Harvard 2001), and Saving the Differences (Harvard 2003). Professor Wright will be joining the Department full-time in Fall 2008. Online Papers (all forthcoming):
On the Characterisation of Borderline Cases
The Perils of Dogmatism
On Quantifying into Predicate Position
Rule Following without Reasons
New Age Relativism and Epistemic Possibility
Relativism about Truth Itself
Comment on McDowell on Disjunctivism
Wang's Paradox
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