Fr. 148.00

How can conceptual content be social and normative, and, at the same time, be objective?

English · Hardback

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In this book, Andrea Clausen intends to reconcile Kripke's point according to which conceptual content has to be considered as being constituted by social, normative practice - by a process of mutual assessments - with the view that the content of empirical assertions has to be conceived as objective. She criticizes approaches that explicate content-constitutive practice in non-normative terms, namely in terms of sanctioning behavior (Haugeland, Pettit, Esfeld). She also rejects a pragmatist reading of Heidegger that proceeds from thoroughly normative but pre-conceptual practice. She develops and defends a particular reading of an approach that conceives normative, conceptually articulated practice - giving and asking for reasons - as primitive (Brandom, McDowell).

Product details

Authors Andrea Clausen
Publisher De Gruyter
 
Languages English
Product format Hardback
Released 01.01.2008
 
EAN 9783110323832
ISBN 978-3-11-032383-2
No. of pages 267
Dimensions 148 mm x 22 mm x 210 mm
Weight 482 g
Series logos
logos
ISSN
Subjects Humanities, art, music > Philosophy > Miscellaneous
Non-fiction book > Philosophy, religion > Miscellaneous

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