Vagaries of Value

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axiology
Category=QD
claims
Cogent Evaluation
Cognitive Deliberation
conclusions
Concurrent Maximization
Crash Safety
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eq_nobargain
evaluative
Evaluative Claims
Evaluative Conclusions
Evaluative Considerations
Evaluative Deliberation
Evaluative Factors
Evaluative Inputs
Evaluative Side
Evaluative Truisms
Factual Premises
Good Life
Hoi Polloi
Human Suffering
Inferential Validation
Knight Errant
Monkey's Paw
Monkey’s Paw
moral reasoning
philosophical realism
Rational Appropriateness
rational decision making
reconstructive pragmatism in philosophy
Scientific Deliberations
scientific evaluation
Scientific Propriety
Soviet Biology
Thematic Homogeneity
truisms
value objectivity
World Improvement

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138517707
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 138 x 216mm
  • Publication Date: 14 Sep 2017
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Pragmatism's founder, C. S. Peirce, initially envisioned philosophy as a means of rationally validating our beliefs and actions. Afterward, William James changed pragmatism into a way of undermining commitment to rational cogency. With the subsequent turn of various contemporary pragmatisms to relativism and subjectivism, such irrational tendencies have become still more prominent.

Vagaries of Value aims to create a version of realistic and rationalistic pragmatism that is systemically viable and does justice to traditional pragmatism's salient insights. Nicholas Rescher strives to return pragmatism to its realistic and objectivistic roots in a detailed survey of issues across the whole board of philosophical thought, action, and evaluation.

Rescher argues that the crisis of pragmatism created by today's subjective tendencies should be met by adopting not a revisionary, but a reconstructive understanding of pragmatism, keeping close to its Peircean roots. He argues that such a turning does not mitigate against the pragmatic program's practical orientation, but provides an opportunity for sharpening our understanding of how pragmatism can and should be developed.