Margaret Macdonald and Analytic Philosophy in the 1930s Unpublished Letters with Biographical and Interpretive Essays
Margaret Macdonald and Analytic Philosophy in the 1930s Unpublished Letters with Biographical and Interpretive Essays
- ISBN 13:
9780198875734
- ISBN 10:
0198875738
- Format: Hardcover
- Copyright: 11/19/2025
- Publisher: Oxford University Press
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Summary
Cheryl Misak and Michael Kremer provide a biographical essay, a transcription of a no-longer accessible paper on Peirce, an essay on Macdonald as a scholar of pragmatism, and an essay on her as a scholar of Wittgenstein. The centrepiece is a set of letters from Macdonald to Max Black, written between 1932 and 1937--a crucial time for the development of the analytic school, embracing Cambridge analysis, Viennese logical positivism, Oxford linguistic philosophy, and American pragmatism and neo-realisms. The letters shed light on the cultural, social, and political situation in Britain in the 1930s and its impact on academic life, revealing that, against the mighty obstacles stacked against them, some women in English philosophy before World War II were able to carve out paths as professional philosophers.




