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On Philosophy and Philosophers: Unpublished Papers, 1960–2000

On Philosophy and Philosophers: Unpublished Papers, 1960–2000

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Richard Rorty
Cambridge University Press, 10/15/2020
EAN 9781108726368, ISBN10: 1108726364

Paperback, 260 pages, 21.6 x 14.6 x 1.3 cm
Language: English
Originally published in English

On Philosophy and Philosophers is a volume of unpublished philosophical papers by Richard Rorty, a central figure in late-twentieth-century intellectual debates and a primary force behind the resurgence of American pragmatism. The first collection of new work to appear since his death in 2007, these previously unseen papers advance novel views on metaphysics, ethics, epistemology, philosophical semantics and the social role of philosophy, critically engaging canonical and contemporary figures from Plato and Kant to Kripke and Brandom. This book's diverse offerings, which include technical essays written for specialists and popular lectures, refine our understanding of Rorty's perspective and demonstrate the ongoing relevance of the iconoclastic American philosopher's ground-breaking thought. An introduction by the editors highlights the papers' original insights and contributions to contemporary debates.

Introduction. Rorty as a Critical Philosopher Wojciech Małecki and Christopher Voparil
Part I. Early Papers
1. Philosophy as Ethics
2. Philosophy as Spectatorship and Participation
3. Kant as a Critical Philosopher
4. The Paradox of Definitism
5. Reductionism
6. Phenomenology, Linguistic Analysis, and Cartesianism
Comments on Ricoeur
7. The Incommunicability of 'Felt Qualities'
8. Kripke on Mind-Body Identity
Part II. Later Papers
9. Philosophy as Epistemology
Reply to Hacking and Kim
10. Naturalized Epistemology and Norms
Replies to Goldman and Fodor
11. The Objectivity of Values
12. What is Dead in Plato
13. The Current State of Philosophy in the U.S.
14. Brandom's Conversationalism
Davidson and Making It Explicit
15. Bald Naturalism and McDowell's Hylomorphism
16. Reductionist vs. Neo-Wittgensteinian Semantics
17. Remarks on Nishida and Nishitani.