
Politics of Practical Reasoning
Description
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This book examines what follows from seeing people as deliberating and acting in ways that intertwine a variety of emotional and evaluative processes and effects of virtue or character. From this point of view, practical arguing involves not just cognition, emotion, and virtue, but also practices, including imaginative practices. Politics of Practical Reasoning: Integrating Action, Discourse and Argument uses these ideas to interrogate ways in which reasoning is bound up with the interrelated lives that human beings lead in their everyday, public and political worlds.
We build here on efforts to re-concretize practical reasoning in modern traditions linked to phenomenology and Wittgensteinian thought, also referring back to Aristotle and the Stoics in classical times. Medieval theologians and philosophers such as Aquinas confront the same issue, as do Enlightenment thinkers such as Smith and Kant. Using the history of philosophical thought as one of our major sources, the contributors sympathize with the link underscored between interpretation, tradition and reasoning by Gadamer, the stress placed on communicative and emancipatory action by Habermas, and MacIntyre's notion of praxis as highlighting deliberation within communities. All these approaches respond to practical reasoning as practical.
Building on these points of view, the volume both explores what practical reasoning itself means, and applies it to particular questions: what it means to respond to arguments about meaningful work or disability, or how to debate institutional ethics or art. None of these debates is susceptible to exclusively cognitive or technical solutions; this does not mean abandoning them to unreason.
Practical and political reasoning is examined here from an appropriately broad spectrum of approaches, founded in a concern for what human reasoning can justifiably be expected to involve, and what justifying it can reasonably be expected to achieve.
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Persons
Karlheinz Hülser is professor of ancient philosophy at the Universities of Jena and Konstanz.
Content
Ricca Edmondson and Karlheinz Hülser
Section 1. Fundamental Structures of Practical Reasoning
Chapter 1: Aristotle's Political Anthropology
Fran O'Rourke
Chapter 2: Pragmatics and the Idea of the Illocutionary in Stoic Language Theory
Karlheinz Hülser
Chapter 3: Utrum gratitudo sit virtus moralis vel passio animae or: Gratitude-an Aristotelian Virtue or an Emotion?
Thomas Nisters
Chapter 4: Seeing Ourselves as Others See Us: The Place of Reason in Adam Smith's Theory of Moral Sentiments
Gerard Casey
Chapter 5: Reasons to Act and Practical Reasoning
Thomas Gil
Section 2. Developing Convincing Arguments
Chapter 6: Practical Reasoning in Place: Tracing "Wise" Inferences in Everyday Life
Ricca Edmondson
Chapter 7: Toulmin's Rhetorical Logic
Frank Canovan
Chapter 8: Reason, Production, and Rival Visions of Working Life
Keith Breen
Chapter 9: Reasoning About Disability in the Light of Advances in Technology
Richard Hull
Chapter 10: Principles in Practice: Reasoning with Principles in Biomedical Ethics
Heike Felzmann
Section 3. Engagement for the Practical Unity of Life
Chapter 11: The Theory of Double Truth Revisited
Karsten Harries
Chapter 12: Philosophia sine qua non: John Rawls' transcendental-political reflections
Sebastian Lalla
Chapter 13: Sceptical Wisdom: Descartes, Pascal and the Challenge of Pyrrhonism
Felix O'Murchadha
Chapter 14: Art as "Organizer" of Life: the Case of Jackson Pollock
Elizabeth Langhorne
Afterword: Signs, Bodies, Artworks
Terry Eagleton
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