Practicing Philosophy: Pragmatism and the Philosophical Life

by
Edition: 1st
Format: Hardcover
Pub. Date: 1997-01-08
Publisher(s): Routledge
List Price: $165.00

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Summary

With the increasing professionalization of philosophy, the question of what constitutes philosophical living has been largely neglected. Now one of the leading philosophers working in the pragmatist tradition aims to recover and elaborate the pragmatic idea of philosophy as a practice of living and a practical guide to living better. "How should one live and how should the practice of philosophy relate to the project of one's life?" Shusterman asks. By way of suggesting answers to this question,Practicing Philosophyoffers an analysis of the essential dimensions of the philosophical life as practiced in this century. He explores specific philosophical problems as treated by major twentieth-century pragmatists--Dewey, Goodman, Rorty, and Putnam--as well as by other theorists--Cavell, Habermas, Croce, and Danto--who can be assimilated into the pragmatist tradition. Shusterman concludes with a personal example of critical philosophical living by applying philosophy to theanalysis and direction of a central issue in his own life.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments xi
Introduction The Philosophical Life A Renewed Poetics of Philosophy 1(16)
1 Profiles of the Philosophical Life Dewey, Wittgenstein, Foucault
17(50)
Part I ETHICS AND POLITICS 67(46)
2 Pragmatism and Liberalism between Dewey and Rorty
67(22)
3 Putnam and Cavell on the Ethics of Democracy
89(24)
Part II ART, KNOWLEDGE, PRAXIS 113(44)
4 Reason and Aesthetics between Modernity and Postmodernity Habermas and Rorty
113(18)
5 Art in Action, Art Infraction Goodman, Rap, Pragmatism (New Reality Mix)
131(26)
PART III EMBODIMENT AND ETHNICITY 157(40)
6 Somatic Experience Foundation or Reconstruction?
157(22)
7 Next Year in Jerusalem? Jewish Identity and the Myth of Return
179(18)
Notes 197(44)
Index 241

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