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Köp båda 2 för 1619 krThe Times Higher Education Supplement, 26 September 1997 Thomas Nagel is not one of those philosophers afraid to tackle the big issues. He also, rather refreshingly, has what Ludwig Wittgenstein once called "the courage to write a short book". ... I recommend Nagel's book as the intellectual equivalent of a cold shower. ... I find myself persuaded by Nagel that all attempts to subjectivise or relativise logic must enmesh themselves in contraditions.
Times Literary Supplement Thomas Nagel stands out among today's best philosophers in retaning closer links with the big puzzles and mysteries that first attract most people to philosophy. He has a livelier sense of their depth and power than is conspicuous elsewhere in the academic study of philosophy, and admirably resists the widespread tendency to deny a thing's existence because it is difficult or perhaps impossible to understand.
<br>Thomas Nagel is Professor of Philosophy and Law at New York University. He is the author of The View from Nowhere, What Does It All Mean?, The Possibility of Altruism, Mortal Questions, Equality and Partiality, and Other Minds: Critical Essays, 1969-1994.<br>