Generated by DeepSeek V3.2| A. W. Moore | |
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| Name | A. W. Moore |
| Birth date | 1956 |
| School tradition | Analytic philosophy, Kantianism |
| Main interests | Metaphysics, Philosophy of language, Ethics, Kant, Wittgenstein |
| Influences | Immanuel Kant, Ludwig Wittgenstein, Peter Strawson, Bernard Williams |
| Influenced | Contemporary work in metaphysics and ethics |
| Alma mater | St John's College, Oxford |
| Institutions | St Hugh's College, Oxford, University of Oxford |
A. W. Moore. Adrian William Moore is a prominent British philosopher and professor at the University of Oxford. His scholarly work is primarily situated within the traditions of analytic philosophy and Kantianism, engaging deeply with issues in metaphysics, the philosophy of language, and ethics. Moore has authored significant studies on the limits of thought and the philosophies of Immanuel Kant and Ludwig Wittgenstein, establishing himself as a leading figure in contemporary philosophical discourse.
Adrian William Moore was educated at St John's College, Oxford, where he developed his foundational philosophical interests. He has spent the majority of his academic career at the University of Oxford, holding a professorial fellowship at St Hugh's College, Oxford. Throughout his tenure, Moore has been actively involved in the intellectual life of the university's press and various editorial boards for major philosophical journals. His career has included significant administrative roles within the university's Faculty of Philosophy, contributing to the direction of philosophical study at one of the world's leading institutions.
Moore's philosophical contributions are wide-ranging but consistently explore the boundaries of sense, expression, and reality. A central theme in his work is the investigation into the limits of thought and language, a project that engages directly with the legacies of Immanuel Kant and Ludwig Wittgenstein. His book *The Infinite* examines historical and conceptual problems surrounding infinity, analyzing figures from Aristotle to Georg Cantor. In *Points of View*, Moore develops a sophisticated framework for understanding perspective and objectivity, drawing on ideas from Friedrich Nietzsche and Thomas Nagel. His later work, notably *The Evolution of Modern Metaphysics*, offers a comprehensive narrative tracing the pursuit of understanding fundamental reality from René Descartes through Leibniz, Hegel, and into the 20th century with thinkers like Martin Heidegger.
Moore is the author of several influential monographs and edited collections that have shaped debates in metaphysics and the history of philosophy. His major works include *The Infinite* (1990, 2001), *Points of View* (1997), and *The Evolution of Modern Metaphysics: Winning the Prize of Philosophy* (2012), the latter of which received the prestigious American Philosophical Association's Joseph B. Gittler Award. He has also edited significant volumes such as *Infinity* and contributed to the *Oxford Handbook of the History of Analytic Philosophy*. His articles have appeared in leading journals including *Mind*, *Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society*, and *The Philosophical Review*, often addressing technical issues in philosophical logic and transcendental arguments.
Through his writing, teaching, and editorial work, Moore has exerted a considerable influence on contemporary philosophy, particularly in revitalizing interest in Kantianism and the metaphysical ambitions of analytic philosophy. His historical scholarship, especially in *The Evolution of Modern Metaphysics*, is regarded as a major synthesis that connects the projects of early modern thinkers like Spinoza with those of 20th-century philosophers such as Donald Davidson. Moore's clear and rigorous approach to profound philosophical problems has made his work a critical reference point for scholars working on metaphysics, transcendental idealism, and the philosophy of logic. He continues to supervise graduate students at Oxford and contribute to ongoing philosophical debates concerning realism, relativism, and the nature of philosophical inquiry itself. Category:1956 births Category:Living people Category:British philosophers Category:University of Oxford faculty Category:Alumni of St John's College, Oxford Category:Fellows of St Hugh's College, Oxford