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Rescher, N Rescher, Nicholas Rescher, Nicholas (University of Pittsburgh) Rescher
Philosophical Reasoning - A Study in the Methodology of Philosophizing
English · Paperback / Softback
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Description
This book is a study in the methodology of philosophical inquiry. It expounds and defends the thesis that systematization is the proper instrument of philosophical inquiry and that the effective pursuit of philosophy s mission calls for constructing a doctrinal system that answers our questions in a coherent and comprehensive manner.
List of contents
Preface.
Introduction.
Part I: The Task of Philosophy:.
The Erotetic Nature of Philosophy: Philosophy as a Cognitive Enterprise.
The Need for Philosophy: Humans as Homo Quaerens.
Rationality is the Instrument of Philosophy.
Philosophy as Truth Estimation.
The Data of Philosophy.
Metaphilosophical Issues.
Part II: Philosophizing as an Erotetic Enterprise: The Dialectic of Question and Answer:.
Questions and their Presuppositions: Issues Regarding the Legitimacy of Questions.
Question Dynamics: Kant s Principle of Question Propagation and the Dialectical Exfoliation of Questions.
Philosophy as a Venture in Erotetic Dialectic.
Philosophical Assessment.
Part III: What s on the Agenda?:.
Unexamined Issues and Agenda Formation.
The Recent Scene.
Metaphilosophy a Part of Philosophy Itself.
The Political Dimension: A Struggle for Ownership.
The Systemic Dimension.
Part IV: Philosophical Discourse:.
The Narrative Dimension of Philosophy.
The Method of Philosophy: Truth-Estimative Conjecture.
Ongoing Explanation.
Historical Unity of Philosophy.
The Data of Philosophy.
Part V: Interpreting Philosophical Texts:.
Setting the Stage: Deconstructionism.
Exegetical Interpretation.
Why Philosophical Texts Need Interpretation.
The Principle of Contextuality-Context Coherence as an Interpretative Standard.
The First Law.
The Second Law.
The Third Law.
The Fourth Law.
Part VI: Rhetoric And Rational Argumentation:.
Rhetoric Versus Argumentation: The General Situation.
An Uneasy Union.
The Special Case of Philosophy.
Philosophy s Data: The Source of Plausibility.
Part VII: Philosophical Aporetics:.
The Pervasiveness of Apories.
Aporetic Antinomies Structure the Issues.
Part VIII: The Economic Dimension of Philosophical Inquiry:.
Plausibility as a Guide to Issues of Precedence and Priority.
Cost Effectiveness as a Salient Aspect of Rationality.
Unacceptable Price Argumentation in Philosophy.
Part IX: The Impact of Distinctions:.
The Role of Distinctions.
Dialectic Development via Distinctions.
Developmental Dialectics.
Part X: Inference to the Best Explanation and its Problems:.
Difficulties with Inference to the Best Explanation.
Best Systematization as a Viable Alternative.
Part XI: The Coherentist Criteriology of Truth as a Philosophical Method:.
Coherentism in Philosophy.
How Context Helps via Local Appropriateness.
Philosophical Coherentism is Self Sustaining.
Part XII: Why Philosophizing Must Be Systematic: The Holistic Nature of Philosophy:.
Externalities and Negative Side Effects.
Systematic Interconnectedness as a Consequence of Aporetic Complexity.
Local Minimalism versus Global Optimalism.
Why Not Simply "Live With Inconsistency?" The Imperative of Cognitive Rationality.
The Methodological Rationale of Systematicity in Philosophy.
Part XIII: Systematization as an Instrument of Inquiry:.
Hierarchical Systematization: The Euclidean Model of Knowledge.
Systematicity and the Impetus to Coherence: The Network Model.
On the Advantages of a Network Model.
The Pivotal Role of Data for a Coherentist Truth-Criteriology.
Coherentism s Exploitation of the Parameters of Systematicity.
Systematization as Truth Criterion: The Hegelian Inversion.
Part XIV: Developmental Dialectics and Complexity:.
Spencer s Law: The Dynamics of Cognitive Complexity.
The Methodological Status of Simplicity-Preference: Systematicity, Economy, and the Principle of Least Effort.
Perennial Philosophy.
Rational Dialectic in Philosophy.
Part XV: Counterfactual Reasoning as a Philosophical Instrument:.
Historical Stagesetting.
Belief-Contravening Supposition: How Apories Arise in Hypothetical Contexts.
The Centrality of Precedence (Right of Way).
Logic as Such Does Not Resolve Matters.
Reductio Ad Absurdum Argumentation.
Evidential Contexts
About the author
Nicholas Rescher is University Professor of Philosophy at the University of Pittsburgh where he also served for many years as Director of the Center for Philosophy of Science. He is a former president of the Eastern Division of the American Philosophical Association, and has also served as President of the American Catholic Philosophical Association, the Americna Metaphysical Society, the American G. W. Leibniz Society, and the C. S. Peirce Society. An honorary member of Corpus Christi College, Oxford, he has been elected to membership in the European Academy of Arts and Sciences (Academia Europaea), the Institut International de Philosophie, and several other learned academies. Having held visiting lectureships at Oxford, Constance, Salamanca, Munich, and Marburg, Professor Rescher has received six honorary degrees from universities on three continents. Author of some hundred books ranging over many areas of philosophy, over a dozen of them translated into other languages, he was awarded the Alexander von Humboldt Prize for Humanistic Scholarship in 1984.
Summary
This book is a study in the methodology of philosophical inquiry. It expounds and defends the thesis that systematization is the proper instrument of philosophical inquiry and that the effective pursuit of philosophy's mission calls for constructing a doctrinal system that answers our questions in a coherent and comprehensive manner.
Report
" Philosophical Reasoning is a probing and commanding study of the methodology of philosophical inquiry. It is an excellent book on the difficult subject of how one should philosophize and what we can reasonably expect of philosophy, and a breath of fresh air falling between the extremes of philosophy as natural science and philosophy as the purely a priori. A very intriguing, articulate and convincing story of the nature of an art Rescher has practiced so well for so long for the benefit of so many. I strongly recommend it." Robert Almeder, Georgia State University
"Philosophy aims at rationally constructed comprehensiveness, now more collectively/dialectically and less individually/reflectively than in the past. So argues Nicolas Rescher in this systematic defense of system. If philosophical about their practice, philosophers who pick up this book won t easily put it down, even if in the end they disagree." Ernest Sosa, Brown University
"What makes the book such a pleasure to read is that it combines the precision and thoroughness of a master philosopher with a writing style that makes for easy reading. This is a book which both novices and experts should read to help both understand the nature of their enterprise better." Philosophy in Review
Product details
Authors | Rescher, N Rescher, Nicholas Rescher, Nicholas (University of Pittsburgh) Rescher |
Publisher | Wiley, John and Sons Ltd |
Languages | English |
Product format | Paperback / Softback |
Released | 24.08.2001 |
EAN | 9780631230182 |
ISBN | 978-0-631-23018-2 |
No. of pages | 296 |
Subjects |
Humanities, art, music
> Philosophy
> General, dictionaries
Non-fiction book > Philosophy, religion > Philosophy: general, reference works PHILOSOPHY / Logic, Philosophy: logic |
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