Philosophical finesse : studies in the art of rational persuasion
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Bibliographic Information
Philosophical finesse : studies in the art of rational persuasion
Clarendon Press , Oxford University Press, 1989
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Note
Bibliography: p. [371]-393
Includes index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
This book puts forward an interpretation of rationality which is much broader than the one underlying the current polarity between analytic and continental philosophy. It will help to reaffirm a range of ideas which have long been pushed to the sidelines by the dominance of the geometric model of philosophical argument.
Descartes's dream of attaining a `certitude equal to the demonstrations of Arithmetic and Geometry' reinforced the assumption that rationality must be assessed in terms of logical structure. Against this, Pascal invoked the notion of `finesse', and Warner extends Pascal's usage in this book to specify a related set of informal but legitimate styles of argument.
Table of Contents
- Philosophical reasoning: The disposition to Geometrize
- Classical models of rationality: Plato, Aristotle and Cicero
- On taking the Phaedo seriously
- Job versus his comforters: Rival paradigms of "Wisdom"
- Pascal's reasons of the heart
- Hume and the education of Pamphilus
- Nietzsche's philosophical hammer
- Philosophical finesse
- notes
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