On the very idea of continental (Or for that matter Anglo-American) philosophy

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Abstract

For most of the past century, philosophers on the Continent and those in the United States and Britain have taken themselves to be working in very different, even mutually exclusive, philosophical traditions. Although that may have been true until recently, it is no longer so. This piece surveys ten different proposed distinctions that have been offered between the two traditions, and it shows that none of them works, as there are major thinkers on both sides of each proposed distinction that do not neatly fit the proposal. The upshot of this is that it no longer makes sense to uphold the idea of two traditions, and that it is time we all dropped the mutual suspicion and denigration that have characterized relationships between us for the past hundred years. © Metaphilosophy LLC and Blackwell Publishers Ltd. 2002.

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May, T. (2002). On the very idea of continental (Or for that matter Anglo-American) philosophy. Metaphilosophy, 33(4), 401–425. https://doi.org/10.1111/1467-9973.00237

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