This biography of a living person needs additional citations for verification. Please help by adding reliable sources. Contentious material about living persons that is unsourced or poorly sourced must be removed immediately from the article and its talk page, especially if potentially libelous.Find sources: "Paul Horwich" – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (January 2011) (Learn how and when to remove this template message)
Paul Horwich
Born
Paul Gordon Horwich

1947
EducationCornell University
EraContemporary philosophy
RegionWestern philosophy
SchoolAnalytic
ThesisThe Metric and Topology of Time (1975)
Doctoral advisorRichard Boyd
Main interests
Philosophy of science, Metaphysics, Epistemology
Notable ideas
Minimal theory of truth

Paul Gordon Horwich (born 1947) is a British analytic philosopher at New York University, noted for his contributions to philosophy of science, philosophy of physics, the philosophy of language (especially truth and meaning) and the interpretation of Wittgenstein's later philosophy.

Education and career

Horwich read Physics at Oxford, graduating in 1968, and earned his PhD in Philosophy from Cornell University in 1975 with a thesis on The Metric and Topology of Time, under the direction of Richard Boyd. He began his academic career at MIT, where he taught from 1973 until 1994, when he took up a post at University College London. He returned to the U.S. in 2000, to take up a chair at the CUNY Graduate Center. He moved to NYU in 2005.[1]

Philosophical work

In Truth (1990), Horwich presented a detailed defence of the minimalist variant of the deflationary theory of truth. He is opposed to appealing to reference and truth to explicate meaning, and so has defended a naturalistic use theory of meaning in his book Meaning. Other concepts he has advanced are a probabilistic account of scientific methodology and a unified explanation of temporally asymmetric phenomena.[2]

In the context of philosophical speculations about time travel, Horwich coined the term autofanticide for a variant of the grandfather paradox, in which a person goes back in time and deliberately or inadvertently kills their infant self.[3]

Books

References

Citations

  1. ^ as.nyu.edu
  2. ^ NYU faculty page
  3. ^ Asymmetries in Time: Problems in the Philosophy of Science by Paul Horwich, MIT Press, 1987.
  4. ^ Block 2005
  5. ^ Review of "From a Deflationary Point of View", accessed January 2011

Sources