Published online by Cambridge University Press: 08 January 2010
Among A. J. Ayer's many influential contributions to philosophy are the accounts of the nature of metaphysics which he propounded at various stages of his philosophical development. Whereas his early position is a clear version of the antimetaphysical attitude of the Viennese circle and, more generally, of logical positivism, his later position is, as he generously emphasized, in some crucial respects indebted to Peirce's pragmatism and to Ramsey's analysis of the structure of theories. His later views on the nature of metaphysics are contained in his book Central Questions of Philosophy and in his reply to my criticisms in a Festschrift, published on the occasion of his retirement from the Wykeham Chair of Philosophy at Oxford University (Macdonald, 1979). Although in this reply he describes his later account of metaphysics as ‘much too perfunctory’, it does constitute an important attempt at answering one of the central questions of philosophy.
1 See Peirce, , 1960, Vol. VGoogle Scholar section 40, §3 (briefly CSP, 5.403).
2 See Wittgenstein, , 1953, §122Google Scholar; Wittgenstein, (1958) 44.Google Scholar
3 See his ‘Theories’ in Ramsey, (1978), 121Google Scholar and passim. For a helpful exegesis see The Anatomy of Inquiry by Scheffler, Israel (1963), 203f.Google Scholar
4 For details see my ‘Über Sprachspiele und rechtliche Institutionen’ (1981).Google Scholar
5 For details on this and the other topics of §3 see Metaphysics Its Structure and Function, (1984) (briefly MSF).Google Scholar
6 For details see my Experience and Theory (1966) ch. XI.Google Scholar