Today we associate prejudice with ignorance and bigotry and
consider it a source of injustice. So how can prejudice have a
legitimate place in moral and political judgment? In this ambitious
work, Adam Sandel shows that prejudice, properly understood, is not
an unfortunate obstacle to clear thinking but an essential aspect
of it. The aspiration to reason without preconceptions, he argues,
is misguided.
Ranging across philosophy from Aristotle to Heidegger and
Gadamer, Sandel demonstrates that we inherit our "prejudice against
prejudice" from the Enlightenment. By detaching reason from habit
and common opinion, thinkers such as Bacon, Descartes, and Kant
invented prejudice--as we understand it today--as an obstacle to
freedom and a failure to think for oneself.
"The Place of Prejudice" presents a powerful challenge to this
picture. The attempt to purge understanding of culture and history
leads not to truth, Sandel warns, but to shallowness and confusion.
A purely detached notion of reason deprives judgment of all
perspective, disparages political rhetoric as mere pandering, and
denies us the background knowledge we need to interpret literature,
law, and the past. In a clear, eloquent voice, Sandel presents
instead a compelling case for reasoning within the world.
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