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There are 8 critical essays on J. M. E. McTaggart.

Critical Essays on J. M. E. McTaggart
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Critical Essay by Hilda D. Oakeley
8,637 words, approx. 29 pages
In the following essay, Oakeley questions McTaggart's proposition in the second volume of The Nature of Existence that the self can exist in reality simultaneously with the unreality of time.
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Critical Essay by D. W. Gotshalk
8,037 words, approx. 27 pages
In the following essay, Gotshalk attempts to refute McTaggart's notion against the reality of time as presented in his The Nature of Existence.
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Critical Essay by Robert Leet Patterson
7,416 words, approx. 25 pages
In the following essay, Patterson examines McTaggart's opinions regarding the notion of “man's last end,” attempting to reconcile McTaggart's Hegelian cosmology with Christian orthodoxy.
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Critical Essay by R. M. Blake
6,995 words, approx. 23 pages
In the following essay, Blake presents several arguments against McTaggart's theories on propositions.
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Critical Essay by W. R. Matthews
5,936 words, approx. 20 pages
In the following essay, Matthews includes three works by McTaggart in a discussion on religion and philosophy.
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Critical Essay by E. J. Lowe
4,503 words, approx. 15 pages
In the following essay, Lowe argues against McTaggart's theory in which he purports that time cannot be real because of contradictions in “A-series expressions.”
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Critical Essay by C. D. Broad
1,831 words, approx. 6 pages
In the following review of The Nature of Existence, Broad praises the first volume of the treatise despite reservations about several of McTaggart's conclusions, particularly his tendency to take certain propositions to be self-evident.
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Critical Essay by C. D. Broad
593 words, approx. 2 pages
In the following review, Broad praises the previously uncollected essays in the posthumously published Philosophical Studies.


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