Introducción A La Lógica Moderna / L. Susan Stebbing

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Género : Lógica
Idioma : Castellano





* solapa muy gastada, empaste buen estado
* manuscrito en solapa
* primera página de presentación en blanco, presenta rotura ( rasgadura )
Traducción José Luis González
Revisada por C. W. K. Mundle
1° edición en español 1965
* tapa dura
355 páginas
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10.8x17.2 cms.
Lizzie Susan Stebbing (2 December 1885 – 11 September 1943) was a British philosopher. She belonged to the 1930's generation of analytic philosophy, and was a founder in 1933 of the journal Analysis. and was the first woman to hold a philosophy chair in the United Kingdom.
Born in North FinchleyMiddlesexSusan Stebbing (as she preferred to be called),[2] was the youngest of six children born to Alfred Charles Stebbing and Elizabeth (née Elstob), and was orphaned at an early age.
Stebbing was educated at James Allen's Girls' SchoolDulwich, until she went, in 1904, to Girton College, Cambridge, to read history (though Cambridge did not award degrees or full University membership to women at the time).[2][6] Having come across F. H. Bradley's Appearance and Reality she became interested in philosophy and stayed on to take part I of the Moral Sciences tripos in 1908.[5][3] This was followed by a University of London M.A. in philosophy in 1912 that was awarded with distinction.[7][4] Her thesis for the same, Pragmatism and French Voluntarism, subsequently being published in the Girton College Studies series.
From 1911 to 1924 she held a number of teaching appointments. She was lecturer in philosophy at King's College, London, from 1913 to 1915, when she became part-time lecturer in philosophy at Bedford College, London; this was made a full-time position in 1920 and in 1924 she was appointed as a Reader there.[3] She also held visiting lectureships at Westfield College, London (1912–20), Girton College, Cambridge (1911–14), and Homerton College, Cambridge (1911–14).[3][9] From 1915 until her death she was principal of the Kingsley Lodge School for Girls, Hampstead.
In 1927 the London University title of reader in philosophy was conferred upon her and held in conjunction with her position at Bedford College. She gained a DLitt in 1931.[3] Stebbing was promoted to professor in 1933, thus becoming the first woman to hold a philosophy chair in the United Kingdom, an event that was, as Siobhan Chapman notes, "headline news".[12] She was also a visiting professor at Columbia University from 1931 to 1932.[13] She was president of the Mind Association from 1931 to 1932 and the Aristotelian Society from 1933 to 1934.
Stebbing was a pupil of William Ernest Johnson; according to John Wisdom she was most influenced by G. E. Moore, and was a point of contact with the Vienna Circle, first inviting Rudolf Carnap to talk in the UK.Stebbing died, following the return of a cancer, on 11 September 1943 at Mount Vernon Hospital, in Northwood, Middlesex.