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Books > Philosophy > Western philosophy
David Hume launched a historic revolution in epistemology when he
showed that our theories about the world have no probability
relative to what we think of as our evidence for them, hence that
the distinction between justified and unjustified theories does not
lie in their different probabilities relative to that evidence.
However, allies in his revolution appeared only in the 20th
century, in the persons of Sir Karl Popper, Nelson Goodman and W.
V. Quine. Hume's second great contribution to the field, which
remains unrecognized to this day, was to propose what is now known
as reflective equilibrium theory as the framework within which
justified and unjustified theories are rightly distinguished. The
core of this book comprises an account of these developments from
Hume to Quine, an extension of reflective equilibrium theory that
renders it a general theory of epistemic justification concerning
our beliefs about the world, and an argument that all four of these
thinkers would have endorsed that extension. In chapters on Sextus,
Descartes, Wittgenstein's On Certainty, and other aspects of Hume's
epistemology I defend new readings of those philosophers' writings
on skepticism and note significant relationships among their views
on matters bearing on the Humean revolution. Finally, in chapters
on Hilary Putnam's "Brains in a Vat" and Fred Dretske's
contextualism - the only promising version of that view - I show
that both fail to rule out the possible truth of radical skeptical
hypotheses. This is not surprising, since those hypotheses are in
fact possible. They are not, however, of any epistemological
significance, since the justification of our beliefs about the
world is a function of the extent to which bodies of beliefs to
which they belong are in reflective equilibrium, and no extant
conception of knowledge is of any epistemological interest.
In Friendship, Italian philosopher Claudia Baracchi explores the
philosophical underpinnings of friendship. Tackling the issue of
friendship in the era of Facebook and online social networks
requires courage and even a certain impertinence. The friendship
relationship involves trust, fidelity, and availability for
profound sharing. Sociologists assure us this attitude was never
more improbable than in our time of dramatic anthropological
reconfiguration. Research on friendship cannot therefore ignore
ancient thought: with unparalleled depth, Friendship examines the
broader implications of relationship, both emotional and political.
Today, the grand socio-political structures of the world are
trembling. The hold of valued paradigms that traditionally
positioned individuals, determined their destinies, and assigned
them their roles and reciprocal responsibilities is becoming
uncertain. In these many global shifts, previously unforeseen
possibilities for individual and collective becoming are unleashed.
Perhaps friendship has to do with worlds that are not: that are not
yet, and that should be desired all the more. Focusing on the works
of Aristotle, Baracchi explores ancient reflections on friendship,
in the belief that they have much to teach us about our
relationships in the present day.
In this comprehensive tour of the long history and philosophy of
expertise, from ancient Greece to the 20th century, Jamie Carlin
Watson tackles the question of expertise and why we can be
skeptical of what experts say, making a valuable contribution to
contemporary philosophical debates on authority, testimony,
disagreement and trust. His review sketches out the ancient origins
of the concept, discussing its early association with cunning,
skill and authority and covering the sort of training that ancient
thinkers believed was required for expertise. Watson looks at the
evolution of the expert in the middle ages into a type of "genius"
or "innate talent" , moving to the role of psychological research
in 16th-century Germany, the influence of Darwin, the impact of
behaviorism and its interest to computer scientists, and its
transformation into the largely cognitive concept psychologists
study today.
Returning to the Greek understanding of art to rethink its
capacities, Creation and the Function of Art focuses on the
relationship between techne and phusis (nature). Moving away from
the theoretical Platonism which dominates contemporary
understandings of art, this book instead reinvigorates Aristotelian
causation. Beginning with the Greek topos and turning to insights
from philosophy, pure mathematics, psychoanalysis and biology,
Jason Tuckwell re-problematises techne in functional terms. This
book examines the deviations at play within logical forms, the
subject, and upon phusis to better situate the role of the function
in poiesis (art). In so doing, Tuckwell argues that art concerns a
genuinely creative labour that cannot be resolved via an
ontological or epistemological problem, but which instead
constitutes an encounter with the problematic. As such, techne is
shown to be a property of the living, of intelligence coupled to
action, that not only enacts poiesis or art, but indicates a
broader role for creative deviation in nature.
Why were Chinese and Indian ways of thinking excluded from European
philosophy in early modern times? This is a study of what happened
to the European understanding of China and India between the late
16th century and the first half of the 18th century. Investigating
the description of these two Asian civilizations during a century
and a half of histories of philosophy, this book accounts for the
change of historiographical paradigms, from Neoplatonic philosophia
perennis and Spinozistic atheism to German Eclecticism. Uncovering
the reasons for inserting or excluding Chinese and Indian ways of
thinking within the field of Philosophy in early modern times, it
reveals the origin of the Eurocentric understanding of Philosophy
as a Greek-European prerogative. By highlighting how this narrowing
and exclusion of non-Western ways of thought was a result of
conviction of superiority and religious prejudice, this book
provides a new way of thinking about the place of Asian traditions
among World philosophies.
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