Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Note on the text
- Abbreviations
- Introduction
- I Ancient idealism
- II Idealism and early modern philosophy
- III German idealism
- IV British idealism
- V Contemporary idealisms
- 14 Self-organization: the idea in late-twentieth-century science
- 15 Contemporary philosophical idealism
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Index
15 - Contemporary philosophical idealism
from V - Contemporary idealisms
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Note on the text
- Abbreviations
- Introduction
- I Ancient idealism
- II Idealism and early modern philosophy
- III German idealism
- IV British idealism
- V Contemporary idealisms
- 14 Self-organization: the idea in late-twentieth-century science
- 15 Contemporary philosophical idealism
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
INTRODUCTION
Our discussion of idealism thus far has terminated in a survey of biology, which is only one of the sciences of nature we might have examined. The purpose of this focus on the natural sciences was twofold. First, we wanted to counter the more commonly accepted accounts of idealism – those we find in our standard reference works on philosophy – which present it as having little or nothing to say with regard to the natural sciences in particular or to problems in the philosophy of nature in general. Second, of the two themes emerging from the idealism that dominates in contemporary philosophy, the issue of naturalism has become a focus of activity since McDowell's influential Mind and World (1996) and the subsequent school of “Pittsburgh neo-Hegelianism” McDowell shares with Robert Brandom. It is a central theme of Brandom's Making it Explicit (1994) that “reason” is not subject to the naturalization agenda favoured by empiricists precisely because it consists in an inherently normative set of practices (interrelated makings-explicit). A second of these emergent themes concerns the normative account of idealism, which motivates the Pittsburgh school's critical concern with nature.
The limits of naturalism also motivate the work of Rescher, Sprigge and Leslie. For nor is experience separable from the experienced, so that what appears as an “antecendent nature” (Brandom 2009: 112) is rather consequent on the conceptual activity that produced it.
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- Information
- IdealismThe History of a Philosophy, pp. 256 - 298Publisher: Acumen PublishingPrint publication year: 2011