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Author Williams, Christopher, 1960-

Title A cultivated reason : an essay on Hume and humeanism / by Christopher Williams
Published University Park, Penn. : Pennsylvania State University Press, ©1999

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Description 1 online resource (viii, 190 pages)
Contents Cover -- Title -- Copyright -- Contents -- Preface and Acknowledgments -- List of Abbreviations -- 1. Rationalism -- 2. Bodies and Disembodiment -- 3. The Sceptic's Version -- 4. Irrationalism -- 5. Persons and Artworks -- Retrospect -- Index
Summary As Plato's tripartite division of the soul, Descartes's criterion of clear and distinct ideas, and Kant's notion of the categorical imperative attest, philosophy has traditionally been wedded to rationalism and its "intellectualist" view of persons. In this book Christopher Williams seeks to wean his fellow philosophers away from an overly rationalistic self-understanding by using resources that are available within the philosophical tradition itself, including some that anticipate strands of Nietzsche's thought. The book begins by developing Hume's critique of rationalism, with reference especially to the section of the Treatise that deals with the continuing existence of bodies (an argument that subverts intellectualist criteria by attempting to satisfy them) and to his neglected essay "The Sceptic" where Hume reveals the importance of our embodiment through a comic portrayal of philosophers' efforts to "correct our sentiments." Then it moves on to ward off charges of irrationalism by showing that, although our powers of self-correction are more limited than the rationalist thinks they are, a Humean position is able both to sustain a commitment to reflection and to sensitize us to a version of irrationalism, manifest in monotheistic theologies, that is otherwise difficult to detect. The book concludes, more speculatively, with a comparison of persons to artworks in order to show how our aesthetic dimension is the source of some of the normative work previously assigned to rationalist reason. Ranging as it does across subfields from epistemology and history of philosophy to ethics and aesthetics, A Cultivated Reason should appeal to a wide audience of philosophers and to scholars in other fields as well
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references and index
Notes Master and use copy. Digital master created according to Benchmark for Faithful Digital Reproductions of Monographs and Serials, Version 1. Digital Library Federation, December 2002. http://purl.oclc.org/DLF/benchrepro0212 MiAaHDL
digitized 2010 HathiTrust Digital Library committed to preserve pda MiAaHDL
Print version record
Subject Hume, David, 1711-1776
SUBJECT Hume, David, 1711-1776. fast (OCoLC)fst00035246
Subject Rationalism.
rationalism (philosophy)
PHILOSOPHY -- History & Surveys -- General.
PHILOSOPHY -- Movements -- Deconstruction.
PHILOSOPHY -- History & Surveys -- Modern.
Rationalism.
Form Electronic book
ISBN 9780271076263
0271076267
9780271076249
0271076240