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On Philosophy, Intelligibility, and the Ordinary

Going the Bloody Hard Way

Randy Ramal

On Philosophy, Intelligibility, and the Ordinary
On Philosophy, Intelligibility, and the Ordinary

On Philosophy, Intelligibility, and the Ordinary

Going the Bloody Hard Way

Randy Ramal

Hardback / bound | English
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€111.95
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Description

This book calls scholars to avoid the temptation to reduce philosophy into a normative discipline. The author argues that philosophy's main responsibility does not reside in changing the world, but in safeguarding sense and intelligibility against unfounded forms of skepticism.



"This book is a very timely reminder that philosophers must avoid practicing philosophy as a normative discipline. Everyone can and should argue for what he or she considers to be right and true and important. But this should not be confused with philosophizing. The main responsibility of philosophy lies in questions of sense and intelligibility, as Ramal argues with Wittgenstein, Cavell and Phillips. It must be oriented to the ordinary, to the life-world in which we know from our common practice what we mean by our concepts. Whenever philosophers confuse their own rational constructions with the reality they seek to reconstruct, they commit the fallacy of logical inversion. Whitehead, Rorty, Rosen, and many others have fallen into this trap, as Ramal demonstrates in detail. His clear, wide-ranging, and well-argued book sharpens the eye for the blind alleys into which philosophy gets if it does not avoid this fallacy."



"This is a courageous book in the sense that Ramal is arguing against the widespread view that philosophy’s task is largely (or exclusively) normative. By contrast, Ramal thinks that philosophy’s primary responsibility is to provide intelligibility. Relying primarily on Wittgenstein and Whitehead (but also on several other authors), Ramal thinks that philosophers should be primarily concerned with clarifying discourse, rather than with offering normative guidance. This thesis is explored with respect to a wide range of topics: ordinary language, experience, theism/atheism, the lives of nonhuman animals, etc. Whatever one’s own stance, one is enlightened by Ramal’s work in the effort to articulate the proper method of philosophy as a discipline. His fear is that by jumping prematurely or in the wrong way into normative concerns, philosophers might be forgoing one of their essential tasks."



Randy Ramal is a visiting researcher at Arizona State University.

Specifications

  • Publisher
    Lexington Books
  • Pub date
    Feb 2021
  • Pages
    270
  • Theme
    Analytical philosophy and Logical Positivism
  • Dimensions
    228 x 162 x 26 mm
  • Weight
    572 gram
  • EAN
    9781793638809
  • Hardback / bound
    Hardback / bound
  • Language
    English

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