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  1. Lewis. David Kellogg Lewis (28 Sep 1941 – 14 Oct 2001) was one of the most influential metaphysicians of the 20th and a key figure in the revival of metaphysics in the post-logical empiricist era. He championed the view that quantification over possible worlds involved commitment to the existence of possible worlds, where such worlds exist in ...

  2. 大卫·凯洛格·刘易斯(David Kellogg Lewis )(1941年9月28日至2001年10月14日)是美国哲学家,被广泛认为是20世纪最重要的哲学家之一。 刘易斯(Lewis)从1970年开始在加州大学洛杉矶分校( UCLA) ,然后在 普林斯顿大学(Princeton University) 任教,直到他去世。

  3. David Kellogg Lewis (September 28, 1941 – October 14, 2001) is considered by many philosophers and observers of philosophy to have been one of the leading analytic philosophers of the latter half of the twentieth century. Lewis taught briefly at UCLA, and then Princeton University for the remainder of his career, but is also closely ...

  4. Autor(es): David Kellogg Lewis / Eduardo García Ramírez (Traducción) / Editor/Coeditor(es): Instituto de Investigaciones Filosóficas Supongamos que podemos dividir nuestro mundo en partes: galaxias, sistemas planetarios, planetas, océanos, montañas, valles, ríos, casas, mesas, personas, partes de mesas, partes de personas, y átomos.

  5. De la pluralité des mondes. David Kellogg Lewis. éditions de l’éclat, 2007 - Modality (Theory of knowledge) - 410 pages. Dans ce livre, D.K. Lewis (1941-2001), figure majeure de la philosophie analytique contemporaine, prend la défense du réalisme modal, c'est-à-dire de la thèse selon laquelle le monde dont nous faisons partie n'est qu ...

  6. 26 de abr. de 2024 · David Kellogg Lewis (born September 28, 1941, Oberlin, Ohio, U.S.—died October 14, 2001, Princeton, New Jersey) was an American philosopher who, at the time of his death, was considered by many to be the leading figure in Anglo-American philosophy ( see analytic philosophy ). Both Lewis’s father and his mother taught government at Oberlin ...

  7. David Kellogg Lewis was born in 1941 in Oberlin, Ohio. He did his undergraduate studies at Swarthmore College in Pennsylvania. He studied abroad for a year in Oxford, where he was tutored by Iris Murdoch, and where he had the opportunity to attend lectures by J. L. Austin.