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O'SHEA, James R. Wilfrid Sellars: Naturalism with a Normative Turn. Key Contemporary Thinkers series. Cambridge, UK, and Maiden, MA: Polity Press, 2007. xii + 256 pp. Cloth, $64.95; paper, $24.95-Books about Wilfrid Sellars's complex and systematic philosophy are beginning to multiply, as befits a thinker of his stature. James O'Shea's Wilfrid Sellars is a very welcome addition to the field. O'Shea explicitly states that the target audience for his book is "upper level undergraduate students" and that readability was a major priority for him. He succeeds admirably in writing a book that will be intelligible and helpful to (relative) beginners in philosophy while still containing much of value to seasoned practitioners in the field. O'Shea consciously stresses the architectonic principles that inform Sellars's philosophy. O'Shea repeatedly brings to the fore Sellars's distinction between the Manifest and the Scientific Images of man-in-the-world and how their dynamic relation organizes Sellars's treatment of issues in metaphysics and epistemology. Again, O'Shea returns several times to Sellars's conception of humans as sensing, thinking, and willing beings, and the organization induced in his philosophy by that trio of human capacities. Finally, O'Shea stresses how Sellars's "norm/nature meta-principle" (that "Espousal of principles is reflected in uniformities of performance") supplies an underlying structural theme in Sellars's attempt to place man in nature.