04984oam 2200721I 450 991079118770332120230803023431.01-317-85228-11-138-87100-11-315-83024-81-317-85229-X10.4324/9781315830247 (CKB)2550000001313508(EBL)1702130(SSID)ssj0001295308(PQKBManifestationID)11731540(PQKBTitleCode)TC0001295308(PQKBWorkID)11336768(PQKB)10328926(MiAaPQ)EBC1702130(Au-PeEL)EBL1702130(CaPaEBR)ebr10879584(CaONFJC)MIL616761(OCoLC)881416437(OCoLC)882251659(EXLCZ)99255000000131350820180331e20131962 uy 0engur|n|---|||||txtccrReason and analysis /Brand BlanshardLondon ;New York :Routledge,2013.1 online resource (504 p.)Muirhead Library of Philosophy: Metaphysics ;IIFirst published 1962 by Brand Blanshard.0-415-29590-4 1-306-85510-1 Includes bibliographical references and index.Cover; Half Title; Title Page; Copyright Page; Original Title Page; Original Copyright Page; Dedication; Preface; Table of Contents; Chapter I The Revolt Against Reason; 1. Reason in its nuclear sense is the grasp of necessity; 2. It has lost respect through a cultural revolution; 3. Which Has Had Many Causes; 4. The decline has continued over several decades; 5. Philosophy at the turn of the century was dominated by idealistic rationalism; 6. Which has now almost wholly vanished; 7. The attack on it was opened by realists; 8. And continued by naturalists9. Instrumentalism sought to replace contemplative reason by practical intelligence10. Logical empiricism discountenanced the rational knowledge of nature; 11. Linguistic philosophy has shifted interest away from speculative thought; 12. Existentialism is deeply sceptical of reason; 13. In theology the current emphasis is on the inadequacy of reason; 14. In psychology, Freud reduced the work of reason largely to rationalization; 15. Making reason the veneer of powerful non-rational impulses; 16. In sociology belief in an objective reason gave way to cultural relativity17. Which was applied by Mannheim to reason itself18. In politics, the trust in reasonableness was a casualty of two wars; 19. And of three anti-rational dictatorships; 20. Irrational nationalism remains a major peril; 21. In literary criticism the appeal to sanity appears outmoded; 22. And there is a wide acquiescence in meaninglessness; 23. The most popular revivals from the past are those of anti-rationalists; 24. The subject of this book is the revolt against reason in philosophy; Chapter II The Idea of Reason in Western Thought; 1. Reason is taken to differentiate man from the animals2. When so taken, reason has four distinguishable components3. Its chief early application is in the connection of means with ends; 4. The free use of theoretic reason seems to have been achieved first by the Greeks; 5. And depended on their notion of form; 6. (1) Form as essence meant logical definition; 7. (2) Form as end involved implicit purpose; 8. (3) Form as law made possible a knowledge of the connection of concepts, which was; 9. (i) Certain; 10. (ii) Novel; 11. (iii) Independent of sense; 12. (iv) Universal; 13. (v) Objective; 14. (vi) Independent of time15. (4) Form as system implied a world of interlinked concepts16. The exercise of reason was, for the Greeks, a condition of the good life; 17. The Greek conception of reason has been dominant in western thought; 18. Descartes held certainty to be the product of reason alone; 19. He analysed the method of reason as pursued in mathematics; 20. This method could be applied universally, in spite of inner obstacles; 21. And even more formidable ones in nature; 22. Spinoza's rationalism had richer motives than that of Descartes; 23. Progress in reason was for him the end of life24. The advance was from the contingent knowledge of common senseFirst published in 2002. Routledge is an imprint of Taylor & Francis, an informa company.Muirhead library of philosophy ;II.ReasonLogical positivismKnowledge, Theory ofReason.Logical positivism.Knowledge, Theory of.146.4Blanshard Brand1892-1987.,49730MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910791187703321Reason and analysis838737UNINA