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Logos - The mystery of how we make sense of the world (Paperback)
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Logos - The mystery of how we make sense of the world (Paperback)
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Our sense-making capabilities and the relationship between our
individual and collective intelligence and the comprehensibility of
the world is both remarkable and deeply mysterious. Our capacity to
make sense of the world and the fact that we pass our lives steeped
in knowledge and understanding, albeit incomplete, that far exceeds
what we are or even experience has challenged our greatest thinkers
for centuries. In Logos, Raymond Tallis steps into the gap between
mind and world to explore what is at stake in our attempts to make
sense of our world and our lives. With his characteristic
combination of scholarly rigour and lively humour he reveals how
philosophers, theologians and scientists have sought to demystify
our extraordinary capacity to understand the world by collapsing
the distance between the mind that does the sense-making and the
world that is made sense of. Such strategies – whether by
locating the world inside the mind, or making the mind part of the
world – are shown to be deeply flawed and of little help in
explaining the intelligiblity of the world. Indeed, it is the
distance that we need, argues Tallis, if knowledge is to count as
knowledge and for there to be a distinction between the knower and
the known. Tallis brings his formidable analysis to bear on the
many challenges we face when trying to make sense of our
sense-making. These include the idea of cognitive progress, which
presupposes a benchmark of complete understanding; cognitive
completion, which unites the separate strands of our understanding
(from the laws of nature to our ineluctable everyday understanding
of things, incorporating the meanings we live by); and the knowing
subject – us – with our partial and limited viewpoint mediated
by our bodies. The book showcases Tallis’s enviable knack of
making tricky philosophical arguments cogent and engaging to the
non-specialist and his remarkable ability to help us see humankind
more clearly. For anyone who has shared Einstein’s observation
that “the eternal mystery of the world is its
comprehensibility”, the book will be fascinating and insightful
reading.
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