The Last Word Buy on Amazon
Facebook LinkedIn

The Last Word

Author Thomas Nagel
Category Philosophy
26.93 28.95 -7% USD

Usually ships in 24 hours

Book Details
Author(s) Thomas Nagel
ISBN / ASIN 0195149831
ISBN-13 9780195149838
Availability Usually ships in 24 hours
Sales Rank #849,102
Category Philosophy
Marketplace United States 🇺🇸
Description
In The Last Word, Thomas Nagel argues against what he calls subjectivism, "a general tendency to reduce the objective pretensions of reason." On his enemies list are the architects of postmodernism, social scientists with delusions of grandeur, and philosophers ranging from Hume and Kant to W.V. Quine and Richard Rorty. Regarding reason as based on contingent features of our nurture, culture, or nature, such subjectivists contend that reason is not generally valid, but valid only from our point of view. Challenges to reason in general are bound not to convince: they subvert themselves if based on reason, but are not worth taking seriously otherwise. Challenges to reason in particular domains, such as logic or ethics, are expressed by "ritualistic metacomments declaring one's allegiance to subjectivism" about logic or ethics. But, Nagel argues, the subjectivist claims are unintelligible unless understood as claims of logic or ethics, and therefore can be adjudicated on logical or ethical grounds. The drastically schematic nature of Nagel's refutation of subjectivism is troublesome, inviting the question of whether anyone truly accepts the position that he attacks. It also inspires doubt that his refutation is developed enough to be, as advertised, the panacea for subjectivism. Nevertheless, The Last Word is highly recommended to philosophers and anyone else interested in thinking about reason. Elegantly written and incisively argued, it is sure to provoke discussion--and thus ensure that it will be anything but the last word. --Glenn Branch
Donate to EbookNetworking
Previous Book Space, Number, and Geometry... Next Book An Inquiry into Modes of Ex...
Previous Space, Number, an...
Next An Inquiry into M...