04407nam 2200733Ia 450 991080960270332120240405061818.01-134-84122-10-585-45579-11-280-10979-397866101097910-203-42697-5(CKB)1000000000253574(EBL)179498(OCoLC)647380614(SSID)ssj0000309027(PQKBManifestationID)11240006(PQKBTitleCode)TC0000309027(PQKBWorkID)10260789(PQKB)11017975(MiAaPQ)EBC179498(Au-PeEL)EBL179498(CaPaEBR)ebr10058378(CaONFJC)MIL10979(EXLCZ)99100000000025357419921013d1991 uy 0engurcn|||||||||txtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierScientism[electronic resource] philosophy and the infatuation with science /Tom Sorell1st ed.London Routledge19911 online resource (217 p.)International library of philosophyDescription based upon print version of record.1-138-16093-8 0-415-10771-7 Includes bibliography.Cover; SCIENTISM; Title Page; Copyright Page; Table of Contents; Preface; 1 SCIENTISM AND 'SCIENTIFIC EMPIRICISM'; What is scientism?; Scientism in twentieth-century philosophy; Five theses of scientific empiricism; The scientism in scientific empiricism; Beyond the exact sciences; A place for the humanities?; Difficulties; 2 THE ROOTS OF SCIENTISM?; Rorty on mirroring; Descartes and ideas fit for science; Ideas and veils of perception; Idols without veils of perception; Seventeenth-century philosophy and the benefits of science; A questionable pre-eminence for reason and scienceBacon and practical reason 3 REASON, SCIENCE AND THE WIDER CULTURE; Faculties of the mind and faculties of knowledge; Reason and the lower faculties of knowledge; Practical reason; Practical reason in history; Reason, culture and human nature; Other faculties; Aesthetic feeling; Genius; The fine arts and their value; The sciences and practical science; Difficulties; The Kantian apparatus; The status of history and religion; The arts and the purposes of the arts; 4 MORAL CRITICISMS OF THE ARTS AND SCIENCES; Five objections to science; Science and pride; Science and evil endsScience and insensitivity Science and the conditions of decadence; Science and meaninglessness; Conclusion, and a remark about moral objections to the arts; Second thoughts about the ends of culture; 5 THE TWO CULTURES; The Snow-Leavis controversy; The two cultures and one-sidedness; The arts, science and the mediation of the humanities; The danger of denying (or deconstructing) a difference; The new monotony and the value of diversity; Rorty and 'dedivinization'; 6 THE NEW SCIENTISM IN PHILOSOPHY; Pluralism about philosophical problems; Naturalized epistemologyVariations on a 'replacement' thesis Unassimilated epistemology; Philosophy without folk psychology?; Folk psychologies; 7 NATURALISMS IN THE MORAL SCIENCES; Ethics, objectivity and naturalism; Values and secondary qualities compared; A model for the subjectivity of value?; The asymmetry developed; 'Darwinian ethics'; From morals to the moral sciences; Social studies, science and interpretation; 'Critical naturalism'; Conclusion; Notes; Bibliography; IndexSorrell is critical of the scientistic tendency in philosophy. He does not wish to devalue science but supports the need to raise the status of arts and humanities within the discipline.International library of philosophy.ScientismPhilosophy and scienceScientismHistoryPhilosophy and scienceHistoryScientism.Philosophy and science.ScientismHistory.Philosophy and scienceHistory.100149Sorell Tom280111MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910809602703321Scientism3961473UNINA