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Traditioner och gränsdragning. Två perspektiv på filosofi i Sverige under senare hälften av 1900-talet

Traditions and boundary-work: Two perspectives on philosophy in Sweden during the second half of the 20th century

Abstract
The purpose of this thesis is to study the philosophical developments in Swedish philosophy during the latter half of the twentieth century as a tension between what can be called an analytical and a continental philosophy. To do this I analyze the works of two prominent professors of philosophy. One is Anders Wedberg and his works in the history of philosophy which is widely regarded and here read as a work of analytic philosophy. His work is compared and contrasted to Hans Ruin’s doctoral dissertation on the term of historicity in the works of the philosopher Martin Heidegger which is regarded as a work clearly placed in the continental tradition. The main questions which are studied are: When and why did the split between analytical and continental philosophy occur? Which are the most significant differences between the traditions? How does Ruin and Wedberg point out the distinction between analytic and continental philosophy in their philosophical works? To do this I used the work of the science historian/theorist Thomas F. Gieryn and his notions of ”Boundary-work” and credibility in science. By doing this it is shown how philosophers such as Ruin and Wedberg through their works defines and talks about the tasks and goals of philosophy from within their respective traditions.
Degree
Student essay
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/2077/57039
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  • Magisteruppsatser / Institutionen för litteratur, idéhistoria och religion
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Magisteruppsats (764.7Kb)
Date
2018-07-05
Author
Ahnfelt, Viktor
Keywords
Hans Ruin
Anders Wedberg
analytical philosophy
continental philosophy
Swedish philosophy
history of philosophy
Boundary-work
credibility
historicity
philosophy of logic
Language
swe
Metadata
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