Cover image for Re-Thinking the Cogito : Naturalism, Reason and the Venture of Thought.
Re-Thinking the Cogito : Naturalism, Reason and the Venture of Thought.
Title:
Re-Thinking the Cogito : Naturalism, Reason and the Venture of Thought.
Author:
Norris, Christopher.
ISBN:
9781441160164
Personal Author:
Edition:
1st ed.
Physical Description:
1 online resource (284 pages)
Series:
Continuum Studies in Philosophy
Contents:
Contents -- Acknowledgements -- Introduction Naturalism and/or Rationalism: Contexts of the Current Debate -- Chapter 1 Living with Naturalism, Full-Strength: Why Philosophers Find It Hard -- Chapter 2 Frankfurt on Second-order Desires and the Concept of a Person -- Chapter 3 Deflating the Cogito: Thought, Knowledge, and the Limits of Consciousness -- Chapter 4 Catching Up with Spinoza: Naturalism, Rationalism and Cognitive Science -- Chapter 5 Alain Badiou: Mathematics, Politics, and the Venture of Thought -- Chapter 6 Deconstruction Naturalized: Beyond the 'Linguistic Turn' -- Notes -- Index of Names -- A -- B -- C -- D -- E -- F -- G -- H -- I -- J -- K -- L -- M -- N -- O -- P -- Q -- R -- S -- T -- V -- W -- Y -- Z.
Abstract:
Re-Thinking the Cogito seeks to combine a strongly naturalistic with a distinctively rationalist perspective on some nowadays much-discussed issues in philosophy of mind. Against the common view that they involve downright incompatible conceptions of mind, knowledge and ethics it seeks to unite a naturalism that draws on recent advances in neurophysiology and cognitive science with an outlook that gives full weight to those normative values at the heart of rationalist thought. True to the book's constructive spirit, Norris offers various detailed proposals for bringing the two approaches into a mutually enhancing - though also mutually provocative - relationship. He finds that claim strikingly prefigured in Spinoza's working-out of a non-reductive yet metaphysically uncompromising mind/body monism. Moreover he suggests how a thoroughly naturalised approach might yet become a locus of productive engagement with the work of an ultra-rationalist thinker such as Alain Badiou. Thus Norris puts the case that physically embodied human thought has cognitive, intellectual and creative powers that cannot and need not be accounted for in terms of conscious (let alone self-conscious) reflection.
Local Note:
Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2017. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.
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