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21. Constructive Empiricism: Epistemology and the Philosophy of Science by Paul Dicken | |
Hardcover: 288
Pages
(2010-09-15)
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22. Knowledge: Readings in Contemporary Epistemology | |
Paperback: 608
Pages
(2000-06-01)
list price: US$49.95 -- used & new: US$29.75 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: 019875261X Average Customer Review: Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan | |
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Good introduction to academic philosopher's approach to Epistemology
How we know what we know - or why we shouldn't know what we know |
23. Thomas Reid and the Story of Epistemology (Modern European Philosophy) by Nicholas Wolterstorff | |
Paperback: 280
Pages
(2004-01-12)
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An enjoyable introduction to the philosophy of Thomas Reid |
24. Selection Theory and Social Construction: The Evolutionary Naturalistic Epistemology of Donald T. Campbell (Suny Series in Philosophy and Biology) | |
Paperback: 198
Pages
(2001-08)
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25. Epistemic Justification: Internalism vs. Externalism, Foundations vs. Virtues (Great Debates in Philosophy) by Laurence BonJour, Ernest Sosa | |
Paperback: 248
Pages
(2003-04-29)
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26. Issues in Marxist Philosophy: Epistemology, Science, Ideology v. 3 | |
Paperback: 224
Pages
(1979-11)
Isbn: 085527736X Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan | |
27. An Introduction to Epistemology (Introducing Philosophy) by Charles Landesman | |
Paperback: 224
Pages
(1996-12-16)
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Superb introduction to epistemology |
28. Ignorance: A Case for Scepticism (Clarendon Library of Logic & Philosophy) by Peter Unger | |
Paperback: 336
Pages
(1979-01-08)
list price: US$35.00 -- used & new: US$27.06 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: 0198244177 Average Customer Review: Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan | |
Editorial Review Product Description Customer Reviews (5)
Excellent Explanation of a Dead End View
Is skepticism useful?
Bizarre to say the least...........
Skepticism, No Holds Barred As someone who has read *past* the dust jacket, I can say unequivocally that Unger is a first-rate philosopher, and this book is a first-rate defense of radical skepticism.Philosophical dogmatists of all stripes (and I include myself here) should be willing to test their mettle against the skeptic, and no-one else that I know of has presented the skeptical stance so forcefully and uncompromisingly as Unger, including even Sextus Empiricus.Of *course* Unger is well aware that his position may seem self-refuting, and he tries to deal with that problem in the book.One may judge his defense inadequate, *if one has read it*.But even if Unger's position turns out to be self-refuting--which I think is not at all obvious to anyone who actually reads the book and understands his views--his skeptical arguments confront all the rest of us non-skeptics.(I won't try to summarize these arguments here, for that would do injustice to their subtle presentation in the book.)Maybe *all* current positions are self-refuting (including mine).Maybe *every* current and past philosophy ends up undermining itself.Maybe, as Unger argues, the very notions of truth, reason, and knowledge are incoherent.If so, it's cold comfort if Unger's position is self-refuting.Unger's book is a call--whether well-founded or misguided--for radical reform of our basic philosophical ideas, theories, and practices.Unger may be wrong--if so, we can always disagree with him--but he is not obviously wrong.Since philosophy has not been a smashing theoretical (or practical!) success to date--philosophers can't seem to agree amongst themselves about anything to speak of, after all--it seems hasty to dismiss such a call out of hand.After all, our attempts to understand the notions of truth, rationality, and knowledge to date have run into numerous paradoxes and contradictions.Maybe these notions *don't* make sense.Maybe radical change is called for, and Unger has the key to it.Even if this is not so, we do not lessen Unger's abilities by insulting them.We merely lessen ourselves.
Insult to Reason |
29. Vision and Mind: Selected Readings in the Philosophy of Perception | |
Paperback: 605
Pages
(2002-09-30)
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30. Race and Epistemologies of Ignorance (Suny Series, Philosophy and Race) | |
Paperback: 284
Pages
(2007-05-10)
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Brilliantly written book! |
31. An Introduction to the Theory of Knowledge (Cambridge Introductions to Philosophy) by Noah Lemos | |
Paperback: 242
Pages
(2007-03-19)
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Good introductory survey |
32. Augustine: On the Free Choice of the Will, On Grace and Free Choice, and Other Writings (Cambridge Texts in the History of Philosophy) | |
Paperback: 312
Pages
(2010-06-28)
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33. Knowledge in Perspective: Selected Essays in Epistemology (Cambridge Studies in Philosophy) by Ernest Sosa | |
Paperback: 316
Pages
(1991-03-29)
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34. A Virtue Epistemology: Apt Belief and Reflective Knowledge, Volume I by Ernest Sosa | |
Paperback: 168
Pages
(2009-08-31)
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Virtue Epistemology |
35. On Epistemology (Philosopher (Wadsworth)) by Linda Zagzebski | |
Paperback: 192
Pages
(2008-07-08)
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36. Redirecting Philosophy: The Nature of Knowledge from Plato to Lonergan by Hugo A. Meynell | |
Paperback: 336
Pages
(1998-11-14)
list price: US$29.95 -- used & new: US$20.83 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: 0802081401 Average Customer Review: Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan | |
Editorial Review Product Description In a contemporary climate that tends to dismiss philosophy as an outmoded and increasingly useless discipline, philosophers have been forced to reconsider much of what they have formerly taken for granted. RedirectingPhilosophy, Hugo Meynell's reassessment of the foundations and nature of knowledge, is a compelling response to this trend. This illuminating study surveys and analysis the views of the most influential contemporary thinkers in the English-speaking world (Wittgenstein, Strawson, Searle, Popper, Feyerabend, Kuhn, Rorty, Lonergan) and in continental philosophy (Husserl, Heidegger, Derrida, Foucault, Habermas). In setting those views against the background of classical philosophy, Meynell offers fresh perspectives on the basic problems that occupy philosophers today - problems such as scepticism, truth, experience, metaphysics, method, power, humane values, and the role of science. An insightful, up-to-date guide to philosophy and the theory of science, Meynell's book will be stimulating and valuable reading both in and out of the classroom. Customer Reviews (1)
A well written introduction to Thomist epistemology This book includes arguements against extreme and moderate scepticism.On the first of these scepticisms his arguements are cogent. He does not,however, overcome the force of Hume's arguements for moderate scepticism. Next, Meynell explains his version of the correspondence theory oftruth, based on how we come to know. Sense-data are taken to bemetaphysical simples, from which we articulate intelligable theories aboutthe world. These theories approximate reality, Meynell claims, because theycan predict how things would have been if they were true. Since we maycombine this feature of expirimentation with intelligent thinking and ourexperience of a designed world we can have knowledge about the world. Although Meynell does not state Theism at the beginning of the book histheory does not seem plausable without it, due to the fact that his realismis permeated with idealism. If there were no Necessary being what reason dowe have to hold that the world, reached through our experience of knowing,is a world for knowing? In short, Meynell's world looks like a world madeto be known. His order of presentation leads me to think that he wanted toshow the reverse of this point: that because the world is knowable it ismade. Meynell then claims that this view of correspondence implies aradical Cartesian internalism and a Thomistic metaphysics of immaterialessences along with mind\body interactionist deulism. By the end of thebook his realism surely does require these positions, however I cannot seehow Meynell arrives at his Thomistic conclusion from his initial chapterrson truth, reality and data. It seems to me that Meynell's love for Godmakes him exagerate the implications of his premises. Naturally, my claimhere instanciates both the fallacy of "to the man" and theso-called "genetic fallacy." Here I hope not to argue againstMeynell, but simply to give my impression of his book. I also think hefails to explain the metaphysics of causation, in most of the particulardetails of his Lonerganian philosophy. This book is fun and worth readingbecause of its broad outlook and its innocent, though not uninformed, andspeculative view of philosophical problems. Indeed, correspondence theoriesof truth are not dead, as long as we have articulate and acute Englishmenlike Meynell to endorse them. Meynell also seems like a good person. ... Read more |
37. Quantum Philosophy: Understanding and Interpreting Contemporary Science by Roland Omnes | |
Paperback: 328
Pages
(2002-02-25)
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Editorial Review Product Description The book opens with an insightful and sweeping account of the main developments in science and the philosophy of knowledge from the pre-Socratic era to the nineteenth century. Omnès then traces the emergence in modern thought of a fracture between our intuitive, commonsense views of the world and the abstract and--for most people--incomprehensible world portrayed by advanced physics, math, and logic. He argues that the fracture appeared because the insights of Einstein and Bohr, the logical advances of Frege, Russell, and Gödel, and the necessary mathematics of infinity of Cantor and Hilbert cannot be fully expressed by words or images only. Quantum mechanics played an important role in this development, as it seemed to undermine intuitive notions of intelligibility, locality, and causality. However, Omnès argues that common sense and quantum mechanics are not as incompatible as many have thought. In fact, he makes the provocative argument that the "consistent-histories" approach to quantum mechanics, developed over the past fifteen years, places common sense (slightly reappraised and circumscribed) on a firm scientific and philosophical footing for the first time. In doing so, it provides what philosophers have sought through the ages: a sure foundation for human knowledge. Quantum Philosophy is a profound work of contemporary science and philosophy and an eloquent history of the long struggle to understand the nature of the world and of knowledge itself. Customer Reviews (8)
No substance - a log of history
Destined to be a classic
Healing the Fractures
Probable futures... Omnes does a good job in the first half of the text tracing an historical development of physics from the earliest, pre-Socratic times in ancient Greece, a time when philosophy and science were not readily separable (a time that is re-emerging in many ways) through to the triumph of science, with physics in the forefront, as a worldview acceptable to Enlightenment thinkers, general academia, and the public at large.The first several chapters each take a turn at this broad topic - a chapter on classical logic comes first, looking in much the way a geometrist might the underlying postulate and axioms of later thought.Omnes then discusses classical physics and astronomy , leading up from the Greeks to Kepler, Newton, and finally Maxwell and his electro-magnetism theories. The third chapter looks at the historical development of classical mathematics, and the fourth at the philosophy of knowledge, not exclusively but primarily in epistemological terms.Figures such as Bacon, Descartes, Locke, Hume and Kant are discussed here.The history of mathematics and epistemology has a profound if understated effect on later scientific development. The second primary section deals with what Omnes terms `the fracture'.In discussing the processes of formal mathematics, logic, and physics in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, he brings up the trouble-spots - Godel's Incompleteness Theorem, varying philosophies in mathematics, relativistic challenges to classical physics models, and the increasing problem of epistemology in the processes of mathematics and science.To what extent are concerns about interpretation valid?Omnes discusses the importance of interpretation as justified for three reasons - that quantum mechanics `could not be more obscure' (and thus in need of interpretative illumination); the idea of who (or what) the observer is, is no longer clear in modern thinking; and, the issues of probability must be reconciled to the reality of existence. The third primary section is the heart of Omnes' argument.Going beyond the `traditional' quantum theory, he introduces the idea of consistent histories.Omnes argues strongly for a common sense approach (citing John Bell, among others); physics is about physicality, and reality is that which emerges from the structure of the laws of physics and mathematics, a construct Omnes opts to call in a term laced with theological overtones, the Logos.However, this logical construct, deriving from the general laws of nature, cannot be free from the influence of probability. The final section of the book looks at key questions and topics - how can we define science?What is the proper methodology for science, mathematics and the theory of knowledge in terms how we can know things in a probability-laced, quantum age?How does common sense play a factor in the way things progress from here? Omnes puts the current state as being able to summarized in three points:logic is part of the world of matter, not a subject merely of our consciousness; that we have enough knowledge now to understand the laws of reality in a common sense manner; and finally, that we can acknowledge the ultimate separation of theory from reality.Beginning in this way, Omnes presents a tentative theory of knowledge destined to influence scientists and philosophers in the future. Omnes presents his discussion with a minimum of mathematical equations, preferring once again to incorporate his common sense approach even to his own writing.Those who are knowledgeable in the hard sciences and mathematics will find this book intriguing; those without such a background will still find this a useful and sometimes inspiring text.
Christian physics... "On tackling this kind of subject, even briefly, one must clearly show his true colors. Thus, I, the author, call myself a Christian, though my preferences in matters of belief are closer to Nicholas de Cues' [sic--Cusa?]"Docta Ignorantia" than to Thomas Aquinas' "Summa Theologica" or Karl Barth's "Dogmatik". By this personal note I wished to assure my Christian friends that the targets of my criticism are only certain thoughtless proselytes." Speaking of "thoughtless proselytes," how about moving that confession up to the Preface so the reader will know the entire volume is biased? ... Read more |
38. The Philosophy of Artificial Life (Oxford Readings in Philosophy) | |
Paperback: 416
Pages
(1996-05-09)
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39. Treatise on Basic Philosophy: Volume 3: Ontology I: The Furniture of the World by Mario Bunge | |
Hardcover: 370
Pages
(1977-06-30)
list price: US$99.00 -- used & new: US$71.96 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: 9027707804 Average Customer Review: Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan | |
Customer Reviews (1)
Precise and perfect.Not designed for light reading. |
40. Heidegger and the Subject (Contemporary Studies in Philosophy and the Human Sciences) by Francois Raffoul | |
Hardcover: 335
Pages
(1999-04)
list price: US$89.98 -- used & new: US$89.98 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: 1573926183 Average Customer Review: Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan | |
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Afirst-rate analysis of Heidegger's thought of selfhood |
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