The claim of reason : Wittgenstein, skepticism, morality, and tragedy /
Clasificación: | Libro Electrónico |
---|---|
Autor principal: | |
Formato: | Electrónico eBook |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
New York :
Oxford University Press,
1999.
|
Temas: | |
Acceso en línea: | Texto completo |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- Wittgenstein and the Concept of Human Knowledge
- Criteria and Judgment
- Criteria and Skepticism
- Austin and Examples
- What a Thing Is (Called)
- Natural and Conventional
- Normal and Natural
- Skepticism and the Existence of the World
- The Quest of Traditional Epistemology: Opening
- The Reasonableness of Doubt
- The Appeal to Projective Imagination
- The Irrelevance of Projective Imagination as Directed Criticism
- A Further Problem
- Excursus on Wittgenstein's Vision of Language
- Learning a Word
- Projecting a Word
- The Quest of Traditional Epistemology: Closing
- The Philosopher's Ground for Doubt Requires Projection
- The Philosopher's Projection Poses a Dilemma
- The Philosopher's Basis; and a More Pervasive Conflict with His New Critics
- The Philosopher's Context Is Non-claim
- The Philosopher's Conclusion Is Not a Discovery
- Two Interpretations of Traditional Epistemology; Phenomenology
- The Knowledge of Existence
- Knowledge and the Concept of Morality
- Knowledge and the Basis of Morality
- An Absence of Morality
- Rules and Reasons
- Promising and Punishing
- Play and the Moral Life
- The Autonomy of Morals
- Skepticism and the Problem of Others
- Between Acknowledgment and Avoidance
- The parable of the boiling not
- The private language argument
- The allegory of words; interpretation; seeing something as something
- Seeing human beings as human beings
- Embryos
- Slaves
- Soul-blindness
- The human guise
- Knower and known
- My relations to myself
- Believing something and believing someone
- Believing myself
- Arguments from analogy and from design
- Frog body and frog soul
- Am I, or am I in, my body? Intactness and connection
- Statues and dolls
- Perfecting an automaton
- Feelings and "feelings"
- The ordonnance of the body; wonder vs. amazement
- The Polonius of the problem of others
- The Outsider
- The concept of horror; of the monstrous
- The (active) skeptical recital concerning other minds
- Empathic projection
- The seamlessness of projection
- The question of a "best case" for others
- Confinement and exposure in knowing
- Unrestricted acknowledgment; the Outcast
- Toward others we live our skepticism
- Suspicion of unrestricted owing as pathological, adolescent, or romantic
- The representative case for other minds is not defined by the generic
- The passive skeptical recital concerning other minds
- Skepticism and sanity again?
- Asymmetries between the two directions of skepticism
- Dr. Faust and Dr. Frankenstein
- Passiveness and activeness; the Friend and the Confessor
- The extraordinariness of the ordinary; romanticism
- Narcissism
- Proving the existence of the human
- The vanishing of the human
- The question of the history of the problem of others
- Distinctions of madness
- The other as replacement of God
- Blake and the sufficiency of finitude
- The science and the magic of the human
- Literature as the knowledge of the Outsider.