Life without principles : reconciling theory and practice
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Life without principles : reconciling theory and practice
Blackwell Publishers, 1996
- : hbk
- : pbk
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Note
Bibliography: p. [247]-257
Includes index
Description and Table of Contents
- Volume
-
: hbk ISBN 9780631174622
Description
Life Without Principles adds a fourth volume to the trilogy published under the general title The Persistence of Reality. It demonstrates why theoretical and practical questions cannot be disjoined. Joseph Margolis shows, among other things, why inquiries as seemingly disparate as those of epistemology and moral philosophy implicate one another in an ineluctable way. It pursues the linkage in terms of reference and predication, naturalization strategies, the computational modelling of the mind, realism and the persistence of legitimative issues, and prospects for an objective morality. It features the historicism and relativism Professor Margolis is known to champion. The argument is drawn out in a detailed way from a close examination of a number of the views of leading Anglo-American philosophers.
Table of Contents
Preface. Acknowledgements. Prologue: A Sense of the Issue. Part I: The Practice of Theory: Adequational and Existential Strategies. Moral Philosophy in Four Tiers. Reasonableness and Moral Optimism. Part II: The Theory of Practice: A Reckoning of Sorts on Moral Philosophy. Life without Principles. Epilogue: A Second-Best Morality.
- Volume
-
: pbk ISBN 9780631195023
Description
This is a follow-on volume to the trilogy published under the general title "The Persistence of Reality". It demonstrates why theoretical and practical questions cannot be disjoined. Joseph Margolis shows, among other things, why inquiries as seemingly disparate as those of epistemology and moral philosophy implicate one another in an ineluctable way. The book pursues the linkage in terms of reference and predication, naturalization strategies, the computational modelling of the mind, realism and the persistence of legitimative issues, and prospects for an objective morality. It features the historicism and relativism Professor Margolis is known to champion. The argument is drawn out in a detailed way from a close examination of a number of the views of leading Anglo-American philosophers.
Table of Contents
- Prologue - a sense of the issue. Part 1 The practice of theory: adequational and existential strategies
- moral philosophy in four tiers
- reasonableness and moral optimism. Part 2 The theory of practice: a reckoning of sorts on moral philosophy
- life without principles
- epilogue - a second-best morality.
by "Nielsen BookData"