J. L. Austin: A Critique of Ordinary Language Philosophy [Book Review]

Review of Metaphysics 35 (4):872-873 (1982)
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Abstract

As his subtitle indicates, Keith Graham's book is more than a reappraisal of Austin's work. It offers a general critique of ordinary language philosophy, with Austin as its representative exponent, and, as the dustjacket adds, "it will also serve as an introduction both to philosophical questions in general and to the alternative techniques available within the analytic tradition for answering them." The first fifty pages or so are devoted to staking out these broad claims, particularly a long chapter-essay entitled "Philosophy of Language as a Method."

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