Rorty, Religion, and Metaphysics

Rorty, Religion, and Metaphysics cover

Description

Believing that humanity would be better off if it simply dropped its traditional religious and metaphysical beliefs, Richard Rorty proposes an alternative approach, drawn from the American pragmatist tradition, where things get their significance against a background of broad human interests, and knowledge is regarded as part of the active pursuit of a better world. Rorty, Religion, and Metaphysics argues that while Rorty’s case is clearly and robustly made, it is fundamentally challenged by the phenomenon of human recognition, the relationship that arises between people when they talk to one another. John Owens demonstrates that recognition, so central to human life, cannot be accommodated within Rorty’s proposals, given that it precisely attributes a reality to others that goes beyond anything a pragmatist framework can offer. It follows that there is more to human interaction than can be explained by Rorty’s pragmatism.

Table of Contents

Part I: Philosophy



Chapter One: The Attack on Realism



Chapter Two: The Attack on Aristotelianism



Chapter Three: Pragmatism



Part II: Religion



Chapter Four: Pragmatist Religious Belief



Chapter Five: Pragmatism and the Theologians



Part III: Ethics



Chapter Six: Pragmatist Social Ethics



Chapter Seven: The Question of Recognition



Conclusion

Product details

Published 05 Sep 2019
Format Ebook (PDF)
Edition 1st
Extent 1
ISBN 9781978772908
Imprint Lexington Books
Series American Philosophy Series
Publisher Bloomsbury Publishing

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