Displaying: 41-60 of 13243 documents

0.158 sec

41. Essays in Philosophy: Volume > 15 > Issue: 1
Greg Littmann Writing Philosophy for the Public is a Moral Obligation
abstract | view |  rights & permissions
Writing philosophy to be read by people who are not professional philosophers ought to be central to the work of professional philosophers. Writing for the public should be central to their work because their professional end is to produce ideas for use by people who are not professional philosophers. Philosophy is unlike most disciplines in that the ideas produced by professional philosophers generally have to be understood by a person before they can be of any use to them. As a tool for delivering philosophical ideas to the public, writing philosophical works is invaluable. The need to write philosophy directly for the public should be clear regardless of one’s conception of the value of philosophy, since writing directly for the public is in the spirit of all the most popular modern philosophical movements.
42. Essays in Philosophy: Volume > 15 > Issue: 1
Matt Chick, Matthew LaVine The Relevance of Analytic Philosophy to Personal, Public, and Democratic Life
abstract | view |  rights & permissions
Increasingly, philosophy is being viewed by the public as a non-essential part of non-academic, political life. Moreover, the converse, that philosophy is viewing itself as non-essential to life, is also becoming true. Both trends are deeply troubling. This essay has two aims, both of which stem from these trends. The first is to show that they can partly be explained by a misunderstanding by philosophers of philosophy’s original goals. In fact, we argue that the goal of philosophy from the very beginning was to improve lives and that this attitude has been present throughout its history. The second is to show that this mistake is pervasive and to try to articulate some of what has been lost as a result. So as to not be entirely negative, we provide brief remarks on what can be done to remedy the situation. We hold that generally, people’s lives and especially people’s political lives are worse than they otherwise might be because of the disconnect between the public and philosophy. Finally, we close with a few practical activities that some philosophers are already engaged in to make work in philosophy more public.
43. Essays in Philosophy: Volume > 15 > Issue: 1
William Pamerleau Investigating the Nature and Value of Public Philosophy from the Pragmatists’ Perspective
abstract | view |  rights & permissions
As a professional philosopher that has participated in public philosophy forums for several years, I attempt to determine the character and value of public philosophy. To do this I adopt the perspective of Deweyan pragmatism, which I argue provides an effective theoretical framework for this purpose. Thinking particularly about relatively small, person-to-person philosophical forums, I argue that they share the main assumptions of the pragmatic method: a prevailing contingency with regard to starting points and conclusions, a willingness to entertain evidence from various sources and disciplines, and a commitment to continuing conversation on a variety of issues for the sake of continued growth and expansion of understanding. I believe it is unlikely that these sorts of conversations will deliver any immediate or obvious results in terms of improved democratic processes at the level of an entire community or nation because of the small scale and relatively narrow appeal. However, as a resource for intellectual growth, public philosophical forums provide an invaluable resource for those individuals willing to participate, professional philosophers included.
44. Essays in Philosophy: Volume > 15 > Issue: 1
Theodore Gracyk Review of The Many Faces of Beauty, ed. Vittorio Hösle
45. Essays in Philosophy: Volume > 15 > Issue: 1
M. Ram Murty Review of Indian Philosophy in English: From Renaissance to Independence, ed. Nalini Bhushan and Jay L. Garfield
46. Essays in Philosophy: Volume > 15 > Issue: 1
Peter H. Denton Review of The Machine Question: Critical Perspectives on AI, Robots, and Ethics, David J. Gunkel
47. Essays in Philosophy: Volume > 15 > Issue: 1
Kenneth Blake Vernon Review of Did Darwin Write the Origin Backwards? Philosophical Essays on Darwin’s Theory, Eliot Sober
48. Essays in Philosophy: Volume > 15 > Issue: 1
Maximiliano E. Korstanje Review of Violencias de Estado, la guerra antiterrorista y la Guerra contra el crimen como medios de control global (Violences of state, the war on terror and the fight against local crime as disciplinary means of global control), by Pilar Calveiro
49. Essays in Philosophy: Volume > 15 > Issue: 1
Steven Ross Review of Mind and Cosmos: Why the Materialist, Neo Darwinian Conception of Nature is Almost Certainly False, by Thomas Nagel
50. Essays in Philosophy: Volume > 15 > Issue: 1
Maximiliano E. Korstanje Review of Violencia de Texto, Violencia de Contexto: Historiografía y literatura testimonial, Chile 1973 (Violence of Text, Violence of Context: Historiography and testimonial literatura, Chile 1973), by Freddy Timmermann
51. Essays in Philosophy: Volume > 15 > Issue: 1
Zachary Thomas Settle Review of Nietzsche, Psychology, & First Philosophy, by Robert B. Pippin
52. Essays in Philosophy: Volume > 15 > Issue: 1
Thomas Jovanovski Review of The Disordered Mind: An Introduction to the Philosophy of Mind and Mental Illness, by George Graham
53. Essays in Philosophy: Volume > 17 > Issue: 1
Robert Fudge The Beautiful and the Good: Introduction
54. Essays in Philosophy: Volume > 17 > Issue: 1
John McAteer How to Be a Moral Taste Theorist
abstract | view |  rights & permissions
In this paper, I attempt to recover an 18th Century approach to moral theory that can be called Moral Taste Theory. Through an exploration of 18th Century sources I define the characteristics of moral taste theory and to distinguish it from its closest rival, moral sense theory. In general a moral taste theorist holds that moral judgments are analogous to aesthetic judgments while a moral sense theorist holds that moral judgments are analogous to physical sense perception. Francis Hutcheson was a paradigmatic moral sense theorist, but I argue that David Hume is best understood as a moral taste theorist. If we do not understand the concept of moral taste, we cannot understand 18th Century moral philosophy, and, more importantly, we will miss out on an important source of inspiration for 21st Century moral philosophy.
55. Essays in Philosophy: Volume > 17 > Issue: 1
Bálint Gárdos History and Moral Exempla in Enlightenment Aesthetics
abstract | view |  rights & permissions
This essay proposes a new focus for studies in the relationship between aesthetics and morality in the Enlightenment period. Recent research, especially by Paul Guyer, seems to have established that the traditional question of whether a genealogy for autonomous aesthetics can be traced attending to the concept of disinterestedness in the era can be answered with an unambiguous no. This, however, should only encourage further research into the nature of the way in which the connection between the beautiful and the good was understood. It is argued here that with the gradual erosion of the humanist rhetorical understanding of history from the seventeenth century the specific content of the link between aesthetics and ethics undergoes a fundamental change, making it significantly more abstract and far less specific.
56. Essays in Philosophy: Volume > 17 > Issue: 1
Eva M. Dadlez A Humean Approach to the Problem of Disgust and Aesthetic Appreciation
abstract | view |  rights & permissions
Carolyn Korsmeyer has offered some compelling arguments for the role of disgust in aesthetic appreciation. In the course of this project, she considers and holds up for justifiable criticism the account of emotional conversion proposed by David Hume in “Of Tragedy” (Korsmeyer 2001, p. 161). I will consider variant interpretations of Humean conversion and pinpoint a proposal that may afford an explanation of the ways in which aesthetic absorption can depend on and be intensified by the emotion of disgust.
57. Essays in Philosophy: Volume > 17 > Issue: 1
Filippo Contesi The Meanings of Disgusting Art
abstract | view |  rights & permissions
It has been recently argued, contrary to the received eighteenth-century view, that disgust is compatible with aesthetic pleasure. According to such arguments, what allows this compatibility is the interest that art appreciators sometimes bestow on the cognitive content of disgust. On this view, the most interesting aspect of this cognitive content is identified in meanings connected with human mortality. The aim of this paper is to show that these arguments are unsuccessful.
58. Essays in Philosophy: Volume > 17 > Issue: 1
Polycarp Ikuenobe Good and Beautiful: A Moral-Aesthetic View of Personhood in African Communal Traditions
abstract | view |  rights & permissions
I articulate an African view of personhood that combines beauty and goodness–aesthetic and moral features. I discuss the idea of communalism, which provides the social and moral values and belief system that give meaning to this view of personhood. I use ideas from some African ethnic traditions, or some people’s account of these traditions, as examples to illustrate this view. The similarities in these examples from different ethnic traditions indicate that it is reasonable to characterize this view as a common theme that may plausibly represent many African cultures. This essay does not seek to provide an anthropological descriptive view, but a plausible philosophical stance on how we ought to understand the idea of personhood in African cultures. I do not suggest that all African cultures or traditions have exactly the same view or that they hold this view in the same way, extent or degree. Obviously, there may be minor differences that do not alter the essence of the view.Many of the authors quoted in this paper who have written on African philosophy use the phrase, ‘African culture’, ‘African tradition’, ‘African view’ or ‘African society’. Thus, it has become commonplace in African philosophical circles that when the prefix ‘African’ is used in the literature on African philosophy, it does not imply that Africa is a monolith or that its traditions are static. There is a recognition that some traditions have changed or are changing. The use of ‘African tradition’ usually indicates a generalizing theoretical abstraction about some enduring and dominant similar themes or ideas in many African traditions. It is also meant to contrast ‘African’ with ‘Western’ traditions, and to also respond to Western critiques of Africa as a group. It is used in a similar way in which the prefix ‘Western’ is used in the literature. This notion of ‘Western’, which is replete in the literature, does not suggest the West is a monolith, but rather, a reference to some similar dominant themes in Western thought.
59. Essays in Philosophy: Volume > 17 > Issue: 1
Mary Beth Willard Vandals or Visionaries?: The Ethical Criticism of Street Art
abstract | view |  rights & permissions
To the person unfamiliar with the wide variety of street art, the term “street artist” conjures a young man furtively sneaking around a decaying city block at night, spray paint in hand, defacing concrete structures, ears pricked for police sirens. The possibility of the ethical criticism of street art on such a conception seems hardly worth the time. This has to be an easy question. Street art is vandalism; vandalism is causing the intentional damage or destruction of someone else’s property; causing destruction or damage is wrong. The only remaining question is which of two coarse-grained models of ethical criticism we choose. The ethicist model holds that a work of art that exhibits ethically bad properties is a work that is thereby aesthetically flawed. That is, the work is flawed as a work of art just because of its ethical flaws. Bad ethics make art worse than it otherwise would have been, although it may be aesthetically successful otherwise. The autonomist model, by contrast, holds that the ethical properties of a work of art have no bearing at all on its aesthetic success. One might suppose, therefore, that on either model, a criticism of street art would be relatively easy to undertake. In defacing public property, some street art exhibits and endorses ethically bad attitudes. On the ethicist model, such a work is thereby pro tanto aesthetically flawed because in the process of creating such works, they violate ethical norms concerning the use of public spaces; on the autonomous model, any ethical criticism of the aesthetics of street art would need to be set aside entirely in favor of criticism that focused purely on the aesthetic properties of street art. I will argue in this paper that neither the ethicist nor the autonomist model adequately captures the moral landscape of street art. Street art may indeed be criticized productively on aesthetic grounds for the destruction it does to public spaces, but the existing models of ethical criticism overlook the complex ethical landscape of street art that results from its use of public spaces. In the interplay of various forms of street art we can see the emergence of an ethical criticism of art that is accomplished by the material properties of related artwork, and consists in the creation of a dialogue over the proper use of contested public spaces.
60. Essays in Philosophy: Volume > 17 > Issue: 1
Gary Bartlett Review of The Feeling Body: Affective Science Meets the Enactive Mind by Giovanna Colombetti and Feeling Extended: Sociality as Extended Body-Becoming-Mind, by Douglas Robinson