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  1. Donald Herbert Davidson (Springfield, Massachusetts, 6 de marzo de 1917 - Berkeley, California, 30 de agosto de 2003) fue un filósofo estadounidense de orientación analítica. Fue conocido por su carismática personalidad, así como por la profundidad y dificultad de su pensamiento.

  2. 29 de may. de 1996 · And although Davidson did not regard himself as a pragmatist (again reflecting his resistance to easy categorisation as well as his rejection of pragmatist theories of truth), he did acknowledge convergences between his work and that of figures within the pragmatist tradition, including C.I. Lewis and G.H. Mead. Hans-Georg Gadamer appeared to feel a sense of affinity with Davidson ...

  3. Donald Davidson, reconocido filósofo, ha dejado un legado significativo en los campos de la filosofía de la mente y la filosofía del lenguaje. Sus ideas principales incluyen la teoría de la interpretación radical y la teoría del significado basada en la triangulación.

  4. Una introducción a la filosofía de Donald Davidson, Salamanca, Factótum, 2001). Hay además una recopilación de ensayos sobre Davidson: Carlos E. Caorsi (ed.), Ensayos sobre Davidson, Montevideo, Fondo de Cultura Universitaria, 1999.

  5. Donald Herbert Davidson (March 6, 1917 – August 30, 2003) was an American philosopher. He served as Slusser Professor of Philosophy at the University of California, Berkeley , from 1981 to 2003 after having also held teaching appointments at Stanford University , Rockefeller University , Princeton University , and the University of Chicago .

  6. A comprehensive overview of the influential analytic philosopher of language Donald Davidson's work on the theory of meaning, truth, and interpretation of language. Learn about his Tarski-style theory of meaning, his theory of truth as a theory of meaning, his theory of interpretation, and his views on language without conventions and indeterminacy of interpretation.

  7. 26 de abr. de 2024 · Donald Davidson (born March 6, 1917, Springfield, Massachusetts, U.S.—died August 31, 2003, Berkeley, California) was an American philosopher known for his strikingly original and unusually systematic treatments of traditional problems in a number of fields.