Results 151 to 160 of about 4,164 (204)
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The Philosophers' Magazine, 2001
Richard Rorty's neopragmatist philosophy marks him as one of the most gifted and controversial thinkers of his time. Antifoundationalism and antirepresentationalism are the guiding motifs in his thought. He wants to jettison a set of philosophical distinctions—appearance/reality, mind/body, morality/prudence—that have dominated and shaped the history ...
Michael A. Peters, Paulo Ghiraldelli
+5 more sources
Richard Rorty's neopragmatist philosophy marks him as one of the most gifted and controversial thinkers of his time. Antifoundationalism and antirepresentationalism are the guiding motifs in his thought. He wants to jettison a set of philosophical distinctions—appearance/reality, mind/body, morality/prudence—that have dominated and shaped the history ...
Michael A. Peters, Paulo Ghiraldelli
+5 more sources
2005
The Brain as Hardware, Culture as Software Philosophy-Envy Strong Poets, Privileged Self-Narration, and We Liberals The Liberal Ironist Between National Pride and Global Solidarity Pragmatism, Realism and Science Is Rorty's Non-Reductive Naturalism Reductive? Scepticism, Correspondence and Truth Strong and Weak Metaphysical Quietism The World Regained?
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The Brain as Hardware, Culture as Software Philosophy-Envy Strong Poets, Privileged Self-Narration, and We Liberals The Liberal Ironist Between National Pride and Global Solidarity Pragmatism, Realism and Science Is Rorty's Non-Reductive Naturalism Reductive? Scepticism, Correspondence and Truth Strong and Weak Metaphysical Quietism The World Regained?
openaire +1 more source
Philosophy Today, 2017
I arrived at Princeton as a new graduate student in September 1979. It was a big step for me. I had never been east of the Mississippi, nor had I any experience with elite institutions like Princeton University. During the first semester, I wrote my first paper as a graduate student, which I published in the Canadian Journal of Philosophy, passed my ...
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I arrived at Princeton as a new graduate student in September 1979. It was a big step for me. I had never been east of the Mississippi, nor had I any experience with elite institutions like Princeton University. During the first semester, I wrote my first paper as a graduate student, which I published in the Canadian Journal of Philosophy, passed my ...
openaire +2 more sources

