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Richard Rorty ; liberalism, irony and the ends of philosophy / Neil Gascoigne.

Van Pelt Library B945.R524 G37 2008
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Format:
Book
Author/Creator:
Gascoigne, Neil.
Series:
Key contemporary thinkers (Cambridge, England)
Key contemporary thinkers
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Rorty, Richard.
Pragmatism.
Physical Description:
vi, 263 pages ; 24 cm.
Place of Publication:
Cambridge, UK ; Malden, MA : Polity, 2008.
Summary:
Neil Gascoigne provides the first comprehensive introduction to the work of Richard Rorty. He demonstrates to the general reader and to the student of philosophy alike how the radical views on truth, objectivity, and rationality expressed in Rorty's widely read essays on contemporary culture and politics derive from his earliest work in the philosophy of mind and language. He avoids the partisanship that characterizes much discussion of Rorty's work whilst providing a critical account of some of the dominant concerns of his thought.
Beginning with Rorty's early work on concept change in the philosophy of mind, the book traces his increasing hostility to the idea that philosophy is congnitively privileged with respect to other disciplines. After the publication of Philosophy and the Mirror of Nature, this leads to a new emphasis on preserving the moral and political inheritance of the Enlightenment by detaching it from the traditional search for rational foundations. This emerging project leads Rorty to Champion 'ironic' thinkers like Foucault and Derrida, and to his attempt to update the liberalism of J. S. Mill by offering a non-universalistic account of the individual's need to balance their own private interests against their commitments to others.
By returning him to his philosophical roots, Gascoigna shows why Rorty's pragmatism is of continuing relevance to anyone interested in ongoing debates about the nature and limits of philosophy, and the implications these debates have for our understanding of what role the intellectual might play in contemporary life. This book serves as both an excellent introduction to Rorty's work and an innovative critique that contributes to ongoing debates in the field.
Contents:
Introduction: No Single Vision 1
1 Politics and the authority of philosophy 1
2 Actor and martyr 5
3 Far, far away... 10
1 Out of Mind 13
1 Our Rortian ancestors 13
2 Materialism and the mind-body problem 18
3 Dogmas of Empiricism 35
2 What is Eliminative Materialism? 42
1 Introduction 42
2 Analysis, explication and elimination 46
3 Eliminative materialism 53
4 Incorrigibility 59
5 Troubles with eliminativism 67
6 Far, far away, lies... 73
3 Rorty's Kehre 78
1 Introduction 78
2 Realism and reference 79
3 Scepticism, relativism, truth 90
4 Overcoming Philosophy 107
1 After philosophy? 107
2 The linguistic turn 109
3 The future of philosophy 117
4 Whither epistemology? 123
5 The reappearing 'we' 130
6 In conversation 136
5 New Selves for Old 142
1 From epistemology to politics 142
2 Dewey's redescription 144
3 Contingency, irony and solidarity 149
4 Metaphorlosophy 152
5 Two concepts of freedom 158
6 Liberalism and the limits of philosophy 168
7 The last ironist 175
6 The Whole Truth 183
1 The authority of norms 183
2 The view from nowhere 185
3 Relativism redux 189
4 Triangulation 198
Conclusion: The Ends of Philosophy 213
1 Double vision 213
2 Nothing but the truth 215
3 The ends of philosophy 218.
Notes:
Includes bibliographical references (pages [222]-252) and index.
ISBN:
0745633404
9780745633404
0745633412
9780745633411
OCLC:
243822721

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