03363nam 22005293u 450 991045882460332120210106204618.00-231-50887-5(CKB)2560000000050751(EBL)895087(OCoLC)664802793(MiAaPQ)EBC895087(EXLCZ)99256000000005075120130418d2010|||| u|| |engur|n|---|||||Naturalism and Normativity[electronic resource]New York Columbia University Press20101 online resource (378 p.)Columbia Themes in PhilosophyDescription based upon print version of record.0-231-13467-3 Contents; Introduction: Science, Naturalism, and the Problem of Normativity; Part I: Conceptual and Historical Background; 1: The Wider Significance of Naturalism a Genealogical Essay (Akeel Bilgrami); 2: Naturalism and Quietism (Richard Rorty); 3: Is Liberal Naturalism Possible?(Mario De Caro and Alberto Voltolini); Part II: Philosophy and the Natural Sciences; 4: Science and Philosophy (Hilary Putnam); 5: Why Scientific Realism May Invite Relativism (Carol Rovane); Part III: Philosophy and the Human Sciences; 6: Taking the Human Sciences Seriously (David Macarthur)7: Reasons and Causes Revisited (Peter Menzies)Part IV: Meta-Ethics and Normativity; 8: Metaphysics and Morals (T. M . Scanlon); 9: The Naturalist Gap in Ethics (Erin I. Kelly and Lionel K. McPherson); 10: Phenomenology and the Normativity of Practical Reason (Stephen L. White); Part V: Epistemology and Normativity; 11: Truth as Convenient Friction (Huw Price); 12: Exchange on "Truth as Convenient Friction" (Richard Rorty and Huw Price); 13: Two Directions for Analytic Kantianism Naturalism and Idealism (Paul Redding); Part VI: Naturalism and Human Nature14: How to be Naturalistic Without Being Simplistic in the Study of Human Nature (John Dupré)15: Dewey, Continuity, and McDowell (Peter Godfrey-Smith); 16: Wittgenstein and Naturalism (Marie McGinn); Contributors; IndexNormativity concerns what we ought to think or do and the evaluations we make. For example, we say that we ought to think consistently, we ought to keep our promises, or that Mozart is a better composer than Salieri. Yet what philosophical moral can we draw from the apparent absence of normativity in the scientific image of the world? For scientific naturalists, the moral is that the normative must be reduced to the nonnormative, while for nonnaturalists, the moral is that there must be a transcendent realm of norms. Naturalism and Normativity engages with both sides of tColumbia Themes in PhilosophyNaturalismNaturalismNormativity (Ethics)Normativity (Ethics)Electronic books.Naturalism.Naturalism.Normativity (Ethics).Normativity (Ethics).146501De Caro Mario290682Macarthur David954609AU-PeELAU-PeELAU-PeELBOOK9910458824603321Naturalism and Normativity2159266UNINA