
Rational Human Condition. Volume 1: Preface and General Introduction, Supplementary Essays, and General Bibliography
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Content
- Intro
- Contents
- A Note on References
- Part 1. Preface and General Introduction to The Rational Human Condition
- 1.1. Introduction: The Rational Human Condition
- 1.2. Bounded in a Nutshell
- 1.3. Rational Anthropology vs. Analytic Metaphysics, the Standard Picture, and Scientific Naturalism
- 1.4. Philosophy and Its History: No Deep Difference
- 1.5. Works of Philosophy vs. Philosophical Theories: Presentational Hylomorphism and Polymorphism
- 1.6. Analytic Philosophy, Continental Philosophy, and Rational Anthropology
- 1.7. What is a Rational Human Animal?
- 1.8. An Important Worry and a Preliminary Reply
- 1.9. The Biggest Windmills
- Part 2. Supplementary Essays to The Rational Human Condition
- 2.1. Exiting the State and Debunking the State of Nature
- 2.1.1. Introduction: Two Kinds of Enlightenment, and Religion Only Within the Limits of Pure Practical Reason
- 2.1.2. The Unbridgeable Gap between Right and Virtue
- 2.1.3. From Radical Enlightenment to Existential Kantian Cosmopolitan Social Anarchism, By Means of Religion Only Within the Limits of Pure Practical Reason
- 2.1.4. Human Antagonism, Hobbesian Cognitive Walls, Reverence for Humanity, and Political Aesthetics
- 2.1.5. Conclusion: Rage for Humanity
- 2.2. Kant, Nature, and Humanity
- 2.2.1. Introduction
- 2.2.2. Natural Piety and the Limits of Science
- 2.2.2.1. From Kant's Anti-Mechanism to Kantian Anti-Mechanism
- 2.2.2.2. Organicism, Natural Piety, and the Limits of Natural Science
- 2.2.2.3. Natural Piety and the Primacy of the Normative
- 2.2.3. Scientific Pietism and Scientific Naturalism
- 2.2.3.1. How to Ground Natural Science in Sensibility
- 2.2.3.1.1. Natural Science without Natural Mechanism
- 2.2.3.1.2. Natural Science without Physicalism
- 2.2.3.1.3. Natural Science without Scientism
- 2.2.3.2. Frankenscience: The Future of Humanity and the Future of Science
- 2.2.4. Bats, Bears, and Human Cognition: Sometimes Hell Is Other Species
- 2.2.4.1. The Blind Intuitions Thesis
- 2.2.4.2. Essentially Non-Conceptual Content, Conceptual Content and Batty Concepts
- 2.2.4.3. The Nature of Concepts
- 2.2.4.4. The Nature and Existence of Essentially Non-Conceptual Content
- 2.2.4.5. Deep Consciousness, Blindsight, and Batsight
- 2.4.4.6. Facing up to our Non-Human Animal "Other"
- 2.4.4.7. The Grisly Fate of the Grizzly Man
- 2.2.5. The Organicist Conception of the World: A Concluding Manifesto
- 2.2.5.1. Organicism, Liberal Naturalism and Natural Mechanism
- 2.2.5.2. Organicism, Natural Piety, the Formal Sciences, and the Natural Sciences
- 2.2.5.3. The Organicist Revolution in Philosophy
- 2.2.5.4. Organicism, Scientistic Statism and the Sleep of Reason
- 2.3. Memory, "Alternative Facts," and the Political Philosophy of Cognition
- 2.3.1. Introduction
- 2.3.2. Varieties of Memory
- 2.3.3. Strong Kantian Non-Conceptualism and Radically Naïve Realism about Sense Perception and Memory
- 2.3.4. The Political Philosophy of Memory
- 2.3.5. Conclusion
- 2.4. Thinking Inside and Outside the Fly-Bottle: The New Poverty of Philosophy and its Second Copernican Revolution
- 2.4.1. Introduction
- 2.4.2. Wittgenstein and the Fly-Bottle
- 2.4.3. Gaps, Knots and Philosophical Pictures
- 2.4.4. Where Do All the Fly-Bottles Come From?
- 2.4.5. Philosophy's New Poverty and the University
- 2.4.6. Philosophy's Second Copernican Revolution
- 2.4.7. Some Follow-Up Thoughts and A Hopeful, Upbeat Conclusion
- Part 3. General Bibliography for The Rational Human Condition, Volumes 1-4
- References
- Endnotes
- About the Author
- Index
- Blank Page
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