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Realism and Antirealism

✍ Scribed by William P. Alston (editor)


Publisher
Cornell University Press
Year
2018
Tongue
English
Leaves
314
Category
Library

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✦ Synopsis


Throughout the past century, a debate has raged over the thesis of realism and its alternatives. Realismβ€”the seemingly commonsensical view that all or most of what we encounter in the world exists and is what it is independently of human thoughtβ€”has been vigorously denied by such prominent intellectuals as Jacques Derrida, Michel Foucault, Richard Rorty, Thomas Kuhn, Hilary Putnam, and Nelson Goodman. The opponents of realism, among them historians and social scientists who support social constructionism, hold that all or most of reality depends on human conceptual schemes and beliefs. In this volume of original essays, a group of philosophers explores the ongoing controversy. The book opens with an introduction by William P. Alston, whose writing on the subject has been widely influential. Selected essays then compare and contrast aspects of the arguments put forward by the realists with those of the antirealists. Other chapters discuss the importance of the debate for philosophical topics such as epistemology and for domains ranging from religion, literature, and science to morality.

✦ Table of Contents


Contents
Preface
Introduction
I. BASIC ISSUES FOR REALISM AND ANTIREALISM
1. Realism, Antirealism, and Common Sense
2. Realism and Irrealism: A Dialogue
3. Dividing the World into Objects
4. Pluralism, Metaphysical Realism, and Ultimate Reality
5. The God's I Point of View
6. What Metaphysical Realism Is Not
II. TRUTH AND METAPHYSICAL REALISM
7Β· On the Metaphysical Implications of Alethic Realism
8. Why God Is Not a Semantic Realist
III. REALISM AND EPISTEMOLOGY
9. Cooperative, Coordinative, and Coercive Epistemologies
10. "In Your Light, We See Light": The Continuing Viability of a Christocentric Epistemology
IV. DEPARTMENTAL REALISMS AND ANTIREALISMS
A. Religion
11. Thomism with a Realist Face: A Response to Hilary Putnam
12. Realist Reference to God: Analogy or Univocity?
B. Science and Religion
13. Van Fraassen's Constructive Empiricist Philosophy of Science and 2II Religious Belief: Prospects for a Unified Epistemology
C. Literature and Morality
14. Truth in Fiction: The Whole Story
15. Fiction as a Kind of Philosophy
Select Bibliography
Notes on Contributors
Index


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