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Books > Philosophy > Western philosophy > Modern Western philosophy, c 1600 to the present
Since the initial publication of "Experimental Phenomenology" in
1977, Don Ihde s groundbreaking career has developed from his
contributions to the philosophy of technology and technoscience to
his own postphenomenology. This new and expanded edition of
"Experimental Phenomenology" resituates the text in the succeeding
currents of Ihde s work with a new preface and two new sections,
one devoted to pragmatism and phenomenology and the other to
technologies and material culture. Now, in the case of tools,
instruments, and media, Ihde s active and experimental style of
phenomenology is taken into cyberspace, science and media
technologies, computer games, display screens, and more."
Jacqueline Broad explores the writings of such women philosophers as Margaret Cavendish, Anne Conway, Mary Astell and Catherine Trotter Cockburn. Broad demonstrates their relevance to current feminist scholarship. Her book is an accessible study of thinkers whose importance to the history of philosophy is increasingly recognized.
Science is knowledge gained and justified methodically. It is
achieved by research and theory formation. But what is a methodical
procedure and what are methodically established justifications?
What kind of principles must be observed in order to obtain the
degree of objectivity that is generally claimed by science? What is
the relation between science in the research mode and science in
presentation mode, i.e., in its theoretical form? Do the same
principles hold here? And how are they justified? Is it even
possible to speak of justification in a theoretical sense? Or do we
have to be content with less - with corroboration and confirmation?
Is the distinction between the context of discovery and the context
of justification the last word in methodical and theoretical
matters? And how does this distinction relate to that between
research and presentation - the constitution of (scientific)
objects on the one hand and (theoretical) propositions about them
on the other? The analyses and constructions in this book take up
these questions. They are explicitly intended as philosophical
contributions, not only in the sense implied by the disciplinary
use of the term philosophy of science, but also in the sense of a
reflection on science that, alongside more technical aspects of
methodologies and elements of theories, also has an eye for
anthropological and cultural aspects.
The present text surveys and reevaluates the meaning and scope of
Ortega y Gasset's philosophy. The chapters reveal the most
important aspects of his history such as the Neokantian training he
went thru in Germany as well as his discovery of Husserl's
phenomenology around 1912. The work also covers his original
contributions to philosophy namely vital and historical reason -
and the cultural and educational mission he proposed to achieve.
The Spanish - and to a certain extent the European - circumstance
was the milieu from which his work emerged but this does not limit
Ortega's scope. Rather, he believed that universal truths can only
emerge from the particulars in which they are embedded. The
publication in 2010 of a critical edition of his Complete Works
opened worldwide access for many unpublished manuscripts, and some
of his lectures. There is renewed interest among students and
researchers in Ortega and this book uniquely delivers scholarship
on his content in English.
This book examines the ways in which religious communities
experimentally engage the world and function as fallible
inquisitive agents, despite frequent protests to the contrary.
Using the philosophy of inquiry and semiotics of Charles Sanders
Peirce, it develops unique naturalist conceptions of religious
meaning and ultimate orientation while also arguing for a
reappraisal of the ways in which the world's venerable religious
traditions enable novel forms of communal inquiry into what Peirce
termed "vital matters." Pragmatic inquiry, it argues, is a
ubiquitous and continuous phenomenon. Thus, religious
participation, though cautiously conservative in many ways, is best
understood as a variety of inhabited experimentation. Religious
communities embody historically mediated hypotheses about how best
to engage the world and curate networks of semiotic resources for
rendering those engagements meaningful. Religions best fulfill
their inquisitive function when they both deploy and reform their
sign systems as they learn better to engage reality.
Modernist Fiction and Vagueness marries the artistic and
philosophical versions of vagueness, linking the development of
literary modernism to changes in philosophy. This book argues that
the problem of vagueness - language's unavoidable imprecision - led
to transformations in both fiction and philosophy in the early
twentieth century. Both twentieth-century philosophers and their
literary counterparts (including James, Eliot, Woolf, and Joyce)
were fascinated by the vagueness of words and the dream of creating
a perfectly precise language. Building on recent interest in the
connections between analytic philosophy, pragmatism, and modern
literature, Modernist Fiction and Vagueness demonstrates that
vagueness should be read not as an artistic problem but as a
defining quality of modernist fiction.
Alienation After Derrida rearticulates the Hegelian-Marxist theory
of alienation in the light of Derrida's deconstruction of the
metaphysics of presence. Simon Skempton aims to demonstrate in what
way Derridian deconstruction can itself be said to be a critique of
alienation. In so doing, he argues that the acceptance of Derrida's
deconstructive concepts does not necessarily entail the acceptance
of his interpretations of Hegel and Marx. In this way the book
proposes radical reinterpretations, not only of Hegel and Marx, but
of Derridian deconstruction itself. The critique of the notions of
alienation and de-alienation is a key component of Derridian
deconstruction that has been largely neglected by scholars to date.
This important new study puts forward a unique and original
argument that Derridian deconstruction can itself provide the basis
for a rethinking of the concept of alienation, a concept that has
received little serious philosophically engaged attention for
several decades. >
One of the basic insights of the book is that there is a notion of
non-relational linguistic representation which can fruitfully be
employed in a systematic approach to literary fiction. This notion
allows us to develop an improved understanding of the ontological
nature of fictional entities. A related insight is that the
customary distinction between extra-fictional and intra-fictional
contexts has only a secondary theoretical importance. This
distinction plays a central role in nearly all contemporary
theories of literary fiction. There is a tendency among researchers
to take it as obvious that the contrast between these two types of
contexts is crucial for understanding the boundary that divides
fiction from non-fiction. Seen from the perspective of
non-relational representation, the key question is rather how
representational networks come into being and how consumers of
literary texts can, and do, engage with these networks. As a whole,
the book provides, for the first time, a comprehensive
artefactualist account of the nature of fictional entities.
Jacques Ranciere: An Introduction offers the first comprehensive
introduction to the thought of one of today's most important and
influential theorists. Joseph Tanke situates Ranciere's distinctive
approach against the backdrop of Continental philosophy and extends
his insights into current discussions of art and politics. Tanke
explains how Ranciere's ideas allow us to understand art as having
a deeper social role than is customarily assigned to it, as well as
how political opposition can be revitalized. The book presents
Ranciere's body of work as a coherent whole, tracing key notions
such as the distribution of the sensible, the aesthetics of
politics, and the supposition of equality from his earliest
writings through to his most recent interventions. Tanke concludes
with a series of critical questions for Ranciere's work, indicating
how contemporary thought might proceed after its encounter with
him. The book provides readers new to Ranciere with a clear
overview of his enormous intellectual output. Engaging with many
un-translated and unpublished sources, the book will also be of
interest to Ranciere's long-time readers. >
This complete collection of Ralph Waldo Emerson's essays offers the
towering wisdom and intellectual prowess of the author in
hardcover. This edition contains both series of Emerson's most
famous essays, filled with quotable passages concerning different
aspects of life. Herein are texts such as Nature and The Oversoul,
free of embellishments or abridgment. Owing to their unique style,
the essays of Ralph Waldo Emerson have found an appreciative and
enduring audience. Seen by many as the guiding light for the
individualist philosophy that was to underpin the astonishing
growth of the United States, Emerson's essays are a superb
demonstration of the rigorous thought and intellectual
contributions he made to the world around him. Ralph Waldo Emerson
was a tireless and diligent public intellectual who would deliver
over 1500 lectures over the course of his career, educating
thousands of people within academia and wider society about his
beliefs, principles and personal philosophy.
John Searle (1932-) is one of the most famous living American
philosophers. A pupil of J. L. Austin at Oxford in the 1950s, he is
currently Mills Professor of the Philosophy of Mind and Language at
the University of California, Berkeley. In 1995 John Searle
published "The Construction of Social Reality", a text which not
only promises to disclose the institutional backdrop against which
speech takes place, but initiate a new 'philosophy of society'.
Since then "The Construction of Social Reality" has been subject to
a flurry of criticism. While many of Searle's interlocutors share
the sense that the text marks an important breakthrough, he has
time and again accused critics of misunderstanding his claims.
Despite Searle's characteristic crispness and clarity there remains
some confusion, among both philosophers and sociologists, regarding
the significance of his proposals. This book traces some of the
high points of this dialogue, leveraging Searle's own
clarifications to propose a new way of understanding the text. In
particular, Joshua Rust looks to Max Weber in suggesting that
Searle has articulated an ideal type. In locating The Construction
of Social Reality under the umbrella of one of sociology's founding
fathers, this book not only makes Searle's text more accessible to
the readers in the social sciences, but presents Max Weber as a
thinker worthy of philosophical reconsideration. Moreover, the
recharacterization of Searle's claims in terms of the ideal type
helps facilitate a comparison between Searle and other social
theorists such as Talcott Parsons.
This book applies phenomenological methodology to examine the
transformations of messages as they pass from the mind to the
linear world of human speech, and then back again. Rapid
development of linguistic science in the second half of the 20th
century, and cognitive science in the beginning of the 21st century
has brought us through various stages of natural human language
analysis and comprehension - from deep structures, transformational
grammar and behaviorism to cognitive linguistics, theory of
encapsulation, and mentalism. Thus, drawing upon new developments
in cognitive science, philosophy and hermeneutics, the author
reveals how to obtain the real vision of life lurking behind the
spoken word. Applying methodology introduced by Edmund Husserl and
developed by Martin Heidegger, the author examines how we can see
the 'living' and dynamic essence of speech hidden in the world of
linear linguistic strings and casual utterances. This uniquely
researched work will be a valuable resource for students and
scholars of cognitive stylistics, pragmatics and the psychology of
language.
This book explores the phenomenological investigations of Edith
Stein by critically contextualising her role within the
phenomenological movement and assessing her accounts of empathy,
sociality, and personhood. Despite the growing interest that
surrounds contemporary research on empathy, Edith Stein's
phenomenological investigations have been largely neglected due to
a historical tradition that tends to consider her either as
Husserl's assistant or as a martyr. However, in her
phenomenological research, Edith Stein pursued critically the
relation between phenomenology and psychology, focusing on the
relation between affectivity, subjectivity, and personhood.
Alongside phenomenologists like Max Scheler, Kurt Stavenhagen, and
Hedwig Conrad-Martius, Stein developed Husserl's method,
incorporating several original modifications that are relevant for
philosophy, phenomenology, and ethics. Drawing on recent debates on
empathy, emotions, and collective intentionality as well as on
original inquiries and interpretations, the collection articulates
and develops new perspectives regarding Edith Stein's
phenomenology. The volume includes an appraisal of Stein's
philosophical relation to Edmund Husserl and Max Scheler, and
develops further the concepts of empathy, sociality, and
personhood. These essays demonstrate the significance of Stein's
phenomenology for contemporary research on intentionality,
emotions, and ethics. Gathering together contributions from young
researchers and leading scholars in the fields of phenomenology,
social ontology, and history of philosophy, this collection
provides original views and critical discussions that will be of
interest also for social philosophers and moral psychologists.
Filling a genuine gap in Zizek interpretation - through examining
his relationship with Martin Heidegger, the author offers a new and
useful overview of Zizek's work."Zizek and Heidegger" offers a
radical new interpretation of the work of Slavoj Zizek, one of the
world's leading contemporary thinkers, through a study of his
relationship with the work of Martin Heidegger. Thomas Brockelman
argues that Zizek's oeuvre is largely a response to Heidegger's
philosophy of finitude, an immanent critique of it which pulls it
in the direction of revolutionary praxis. Brockelman also finds
limitations in Zizek's relationship with Heidegger, specifically in
his ambivalence about Heidegger's technophobia.Brockelman's
critique of Zizek departs from this ambivalence - a fundamental
tension in Zizek's work between a historicist critical theory of
techno-capitalism and an anti-historicist theory of revolutionary
change. In addition to clarifying what Zizek has to say about our
world and about the possibility of radical change in it, "Zizek and
Heidegger" explores the various ways in which this split at the
center of his thought appears within it - in Zizek's views on
history or on the relationship between the revolutionary leader and
the proletariat or between the analyst and the analysand.
This book provides a timely, compelling, multidisciplinary critique
of the largely tacit set of assumptions funding Modernity in the
West. A partnership between Michael Polanyi and Charles Taylor's
thought promises to cast the errors of the past in a new light, to
graciously show how these errors can be amended, and to provide a
specific cartography of how we can responsibly and meaningfully
explore new possibilities for ethics, political society, and
religion in a post-modern modernity.
Hilary Putnam is one of America's most important living
philosophers. This book offers an introduction to and overview of
Putnam's ideas, his writings and his contributions to the various
fields of philosophy.Hilary Putnam is one of America's most
important and influential contemporary philosophers. He has made
considerable contributions to the philosophy of mind, philosophy of
language, philosophy of science, philosophy of mathematics, logic,
metaphysics and ethics. In many of these areas he has been not only
an active participant, but a foundational thinker. This book offers
an overview of Putnam's ideas, his key writings and his
contributions to the various fields of philosophy.Thematically
organized, the book begins with Putnam's work in the philosophy of
language and shows how his theory of semantic externalism serves as
a lynchpin for understanding his thought as a whole. Crucially,
Lance P. Hickey also examines the ways in which Putnam has shifted
his position on some key philosophical issues and argues that there
is in fact more unity to Putnam's thought than is widely believed.
This is the ideal companion to study of this hugely influential
thinker." The Continuum Contemporary American Thinkers" series
offers concise and accessible introductions to the most important
and influential thinkers at work in philosophy today. Designed
specifically to meet the needs of students and readers encountering
these thinkers for the first time, these informative books provide
a coherent overview and analysis of each thinker's vital
contribution to the field of philosophy. The series is the ideal
companion to the study of these most inspiring and challenging of
thinkers.
William James (1842-1910) was one of the most original and
influential American thinkers of the late 19th and early 20th
centuries. As a professor at Harvard University he published many
works that had a wide-ranging impact on both psychology and
philosophy. His "Principles of Psychology" was the most important
English-language work on the mind since Locke's "Essay Concerning
Human Understanding." His "Varieties of Religious Experience
"practically inaugurated the field of psychology of religion, and
it also remains a major inspiration for philosophy of religion.
Perhaps most importantly, James publicized the movement of
pragmatism and supplied much of its powerful momentum.
This book covers the primary topics for which James is still
closely studied: the nature of experience; the functions of the
mind; the criteria for knowledge; the definition of "truth"; the
ethical life; and the religious life. His notable terms, still
resonating in their respective fields, are all here, from the
"stream of consciousness" and "pure experience" to the "will to
believe," the "cash-value of truth," and the distinction between
the religiously "healthy soul" and the "sick soul."
This volume's eighteen selections receive the bulk of the attention
and citation from scholars, provide excellent coverage of core
topics, and have a broad appeal across many academic disciplines.
This well-organized compilation of James's important writings
offers an exciting and fascinating tour for both the casual reader
and the dedicated student interested in philosophy, psychology,
religious studies, American studies, or any related field.
In Certainty in Action, Daniele Moyal-Sharrock describes how her
encounter with Wittgenstein overturned her previous assumptions
that the mind is a product of brain activity and that thought,
consciousness, the will, feelings, memories, knowledge and language
are stored and processed in the brain, by the brain. She shows how
Wittgenstein enables us to veer away from this brain-centred view
of intelligence and behaviour to a person-centred view focusing on
ways of acting that are both diversely embedded across forms of
human life and universally embedded in a single human form of life.
The book traces the radical importance of action as the cohesive
thread weaving through Wittgenstein's philosophy, and shows how
certainty intertwines with it to produce new ways of engaging in
epistemology, the philosophy of mind and the philosophy of
language. This selection of Moyal-Sharrock's essays vividly
illustrates some of the ways in which Wittgenstein's pioneering
enactivism has impacted - and can further impact - not only
philosophy, but also neighbouring disciplines such as linguistics,
psychology, primatology, evolutionary psychology and anthropology.
Certainty in Action is essential reading for students and
researchers of these disciplines, and for anyone interested in
getting a grasp of Wittgenstein's lasting genius and influence.
As read on BBC Radio 4's 'Book of the Week', a timely, moving and
profound exploration of how writers, composers and artists have
searched for solace while facing loss, tragedy and crisis, from the
historian and Booker Prize-shortlisted novelist Michael Ignatieff.
'This erudite and heartfelt survey reminds us that the need for
consolation is timeless, as are the inspiring words and examples of
those who walked this path before us.' Toronto Star When we lose
someone we love, when we suffer loss or defeat, when catastrophe
strikes - war, famine, pandemic - we go in search of consolation.
Once the province of priests and philosophers, the language of
consolation has largely vanished from our modern vocabulary, and
the places where it was offered, houses of religion, are often
empty. Rejecting the solace of ancient religious texts, humanity
since the sixteenth century has increasingly placed its faith in
science, ideology, and the therapeutic. How do we console each
other and ourselves in an age of unbelief? In a series of portraits
of writers, artists, and musicians searching for consolation - from
the books of Job and Psalms to Albert Camus, Anna Akhmatova, and
Primo Levi - writer and historian Michael Ignatieff shows how men
and women in extremity have looked to each other across time to
recover hope and resilience. Recreating the moments when great
figures found the courage to confront their fate and the
determination to continue unafraid, On Consolation takes those
stories into the present, movingly contending that we can revive
these traditions of consolation to meet the anguish and
uncertainties of the twenty-first century.
This book offers an empirical and theoretical account of the mode
of governance that characterizes the Bologna Process. In addition,
it shows how the reform materializes and is translated in everyday
working life among professors and managers in higher education. It
examines the so-called Open Method of Coordination as a powerful
actor that uses "soft governance" to advance transnational
standards in higher education. The book shows how these standards
no longer serve as tools for what were once human organizational,
national or international, regulators. Instead, the standards have
become regulators themselves - the faceless masters of higher
education. By exploring this, the book reveals the close
connections between the Bologna Process and the EU regarding
regulative and monitoring techniques such as standardizations and
comparisons, which are carried out through the Open Method of
Coordination. It suggests that the Bologna Process works as a
subtle means to circumvent the EU's subsidiarity principle, making
it possible to accomplish a European governance of higher education
despite the fact that education falls outside EU's legislative
reach. The book's research interest in translation processes,
agency and power relations among policy actors positions it in
studies on policy transfer, policy borrowing and globalization.
However, different from conventional approaches, this study draws
on additional interpretive frameworks such as new materialism.
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