Willard Van Orman Quine (25 Juni 1908–25 Desember 2000) (dikenal kawan karib sebagai "Van")[1] adalah seorang filsufAmerika dan ahli logika dalam tradisi analitik.
1960 Word and Object. MIT Press; ISBN0-262-67001-1. The closest thing Quine wrote to a philosophical treatise. Chpt. 2 sets out the indeterminacy of translation thesis.
1974 (1971) The Roots of Reference. Open Court Publishing Company ISBN0-8126-9101-6 (developed from Quine's Carus Lectures)
1976 (1966). The Ways of Paradox. Harvard Univ. Press.
1969 Ontological Relativity and Other Essays. Columbia Univ. Press. ISBN0-231-08357-2. Contains chapters on ontological relativity, naturalized epistemology, and natural kinds.
1969 (1963). Set Theory and Its Logic. Harvard Univ. Press.
1985 The Time of My Life: An Autobiography. Cambridge, The MIT Press. ISBN0-262-17003-5. 1986: Harvard Univ. Press.
1986 (1970). The Philosophy of Logic. Harvard Univ. Press.
1987 Quiddities: An Intermittently Philosophical Dictionary. Harvard Univ. Press. ISBN0-14-012522-1. A work of essays, many subtly humorous, for lay readers, very revealing of the breadth of his interests.
1992 (1990). Pursuit of Truth. Harvard Univ. Press. A short, lively synthesis of his thought for advanced students and general readers not fooled by its simplicity. ISBN0-674-73951-5.
1995, From Stimulus to Science. Harvard Univ. Press. ISBN0-674-32635-0.
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1946, "Concatenation as a basis for arithmetic." Reprinted in his Selected Logic Papers. Harvard Univ. Press.
1948, "On What There Is", Review of Metaphysics2(5) (JSTOR). Reprinted in his 1953 From a Logical Point of View. Harvard University Press.[3]
1951, "Two Dogmas of Empiricism", The Philosophical Review60: 20–43. Reprinted in his 1953 From a Logical Point of View. Harvard University Press.
1956, "Quantifiers and Propositional Attitudes," Journal of Philosophy53. Reprinted in his 1976 Ways of Paradox. Harvard Univ. Press: 185–96.
1969, "Epistemology Naturalized" in Ontological Relativity and Other Essays. New York: Columbia University Press: 69–90.
"Truth by Convention," first published in 1936. Reprinted in the book, Readings in Philosophical Analysis, edited by Herbert Feigl and Wilfrid Sellars, pp.250–273, Appleton-Century-Crofts, 1949.
In this paper, Quine explicitly connected each of the three main medieval ontological positions, namely realism/conceptualism/nominalism, with one of three dominant schools in modern philosophy of mathematics: logicism/intuitionism/formalism respectively.