<p><strong>'Frank Ramsey is as important as any other British philosopher of the last century.' -David Papineau, The Philosophers' Magazine</strong><br /><br /><strong>'For since beginning to occupy myself with philosophy again, sixteen years ago, I have been forced to recognize grave mistakes in what I wrote in that first book. I was helped to realize these mistakes - to a degree which I myself am hardly able to estimate - by the criticism which my idea encountered from Frank Ramsey, with whom I discussed them in numerable conversations during the last two years of his life.'</strong> - <em>Ludwig Wittgenstein, preface to Philosophical Investigations</em><br /><br /><strong>'Of the people at Cambridge who studied the </strong><em>Tractatus</em><strong> in its first year of publication, Ramsey was undoubtedly the most perceptive. Although still an undergraduate, he was commissioned to write a review of Wittgenstein's work for the philosophical journal, </strong><em>Mind</em><strong>. The review remains to this day one of the most reliable expositions, and one of the most penetrating criticisms, of the work.'-Ray Monk, Ludwig Wittgenstein: The Duty of Genius</strong><br /><br /><strong>'In the twenty-six short years of his life, F.P.Ramsey sowed the seeds of all the most important ideas in twentieth-century philosophy. Pascal Engel and Jérôme Dokic have done an excellent job of explaining Ramsey's contribution, and showing what he might have achieved had he lived.'</strong> - <em>David Papineau, Kings College, London</em></p>