The Objects of Thought
Tim Crane
Reviews and Awards
"The Objects of Thought is a rich book, full of ideas and arguments. Making room for non-existent objects is a complicated business, and Crane covers a lot of ground very clearly. So this is a great book for anyone who wishes to get a sophisticated overview of the debate about non-existent objects. Because I have only been able to discuss a very small part of this complicated issue, my suggestion is to go out and read the book." --Analysis Reviews
"Ambitious, ingenious, and lucid...Crane's excellent book...has all sorts of interesting and insightful things to say about metaphysics, language, and intentionality. There is a great deal to be learned about these things from TheObjects of Thought, whether or not one ultimately agrees with the details of Crane's positive view. Crane also has a fluid clear style that makes his book a pleasure to read. So I recommend it very warmly, not merely to those interested in the nonexistent, but to all those interested in metaphysics and intentionality." -- Mind
"His discussion throughout is both delightfully clear and eminently sensible...a quality that is rarer than it should be in view of much recent metaphysical extravagance in analytic philosophy...Tim's Crane's account is, all told, of considerable merit, and can be recommended to anyone concerned with the nature of the mind." -- The Times Literary Supplement
"ingenious, full of insight and wonderfully clearly written." -- The Philosophical Quarterly
"elegant and original." -- Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews
"Crane offers a solid contribution to the debate on the problem of intentional inexistence...Highly recommended." -- CHOICE
"I recommend it highly to those interested not only in the specific matters with which it deals, but also to philosophers of mind more generally." -- Philosophy
"a rich book, full of ideas and arguments...Crane covers a lot of ground very clearly. So this is a great book for anyone who wishes to get a sophisticated overview of the debate about non-existent objects. " -- Analysis
"[a] wonderful little elegant book...one is struck by the incredible clarity of exposition that makes the book highly valuable as an introduction to the problem...This is a wonderful piece of philosophical argumentation and analysis...full of insight...a major contribution to the contemporary debate in this field." -- Jocelyn Benoist, European Journal of Philosophy