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Quine and the Limits of Analytical Philosophy

A Philosophical Video Essay Series on Meaning, Metaphysics, and the Collapse of Analytic Boundaries

Quine and the Limits of Analytical Philosophy is a rigorous and conceptually ambitious exploration of one of the most transformative figures in 20th-century thought. Combining philosophical narrative, camera-presented lectures, and cinematic video essays, this course traces W. V. O. Quine’s intellectual legacy and the shockwaves his work continues to send across philosophy, linguistics, the theory of computation, cognitive science, and the social sciences.

What you’ll learn

Course Content

Requirements

Quine and the Limits of Analytical Philosophy is a rigorous and conceptually ambitious exploration of one of the most transformative figures in 20th-century thought. Combining philosophical narrative, camera-presented lectures, and cinematic video essays, this course traces W. V. O. Quine’s intellectual legacy and the shockwaves his work continues to send across philosophy, linguistics, the theory of computation, cognitive science, and the social sciences.

Taught and authored by Dr. Lucas Ribeiro Vollet (Ph.D., UFSC with a period abroad in Brown University; with publications in Husserl Studies, Cognitio, Peri, Kalagatos and others), this course is both a critical history of the analytic tradition and a conceptual re-evaluation of its epistemological and ontological commitments. From Frege and Russell to Carnap, Tarski, and Wittgenstein, the course builds a genealogical structure that reveals how meaning became a battlefield, and how Quine, far from simply rejecting past paradigms, exposes their fragility from within.

The course combines three types of materials:

Each module addresses both historical and contemporary problems:

Throughout, Quine is not treated as a terminus but as a point of philosophical rupture — one that allows new questions about normativity, knowledge, and symbolic depth to emerge.

This course is not introductory in tone but remains accessible to those with a foundational background in philosophy, cognitive science, or linguistics. It invites learners to critically engage with the assumptions that underlie formal semantics, scientific objectivity, and philosophical method itself.

Included Materials:

Whether you are interested in the structure of language, the dynamics of theory change, or the intersection between epistemology and ideology, this course offers a unique and philosophically committed space to revisit — and rethink — the foundations of analytic thought in the shadow of Quine.