04059nam 2200637Ia 450 991101955530332120200520144314.09786612117343978128211734112821173439781444310948144431094197814443109311444310933(CKB)1000000000719929(EBL)428276(OCoLC)437112337(SSID)ssj0000354905(PQKBManifestationID)11925320(PQKBTitleCode)TC0000354905(PQKBWorkID)10319026(PQKB)11085799(MiAaPQ)EBC428276(Perlego)2789206(EXLCZ)99100000000071992920090105d2009 uy 0engur|n|---|||||txtccrWorlds of truth a philosophy of knowledge /by Israel SchefflerMalden, MA Wiley-Blackwell20091 online resource (163 p.)Description based upon print version of record.9781405191708 1405191708 Includes bibliographical references and index.WORLDS OF TRUTH: A Philosophy of Knowledge; Contents; Preface; Acknowledgments; Introduction; Part I: Inquiry; Chapter 1: Justification; 1. Beliefs; 2. Access to Truth; 3. Cogito Ergo Sum; 4. Mathematical Certainty; 5. Classical Logic; 6. C. I. Lewis' Empiricism; 7. Access as a Metaphor; 8. J. F. Fries and K. Popper; 9. Voluntarism and Linearity; 10. One-Way Justification; 11. Beginning in the Middle; 12. Justification, Contextual and Comparative; 13. Justification in the Empirical Sciences; 14. Circularity versus Linearity; 15. Democratic Controls; 16. Interactionism; Chapter 2: Truth1. Allergy to Absolute Truth2. Provisionality and Truth; 3. Truth versus Verification; 4. Truth and Fixity; 5. Transparency, Tarski, and Carnap; 6. Truth and Certainty; 7. Sentences as Truth Candidates; 8. Theoretical Terms; 9. Varieties of Instrumentalism; 10. Pragmatism and Instrumentalism; 11. Systems, Simplicity, Reduction; 12. Crises in Science; 13. Reduction and Expansion; Chapter 3: Worlds; 1. Philosophies of Truth; 2. Operationism and Truth; 3. Version-Dependence; 4. Differences among Scientifically Oriented Philosophers; 5. Monism, Pluralism, Plurealism; 6. Realism versus Irrealism7. A Theory of Everything8. The Status of Ethics; 9. Emotive Theories; Ayer and Stevenson; 10. Moore's Ethical Intuitionism; 11. Dewey and Ethical Naturalism; 12. Symbol, Reference, and Ritual; Part II: Related Pragmatic Themes; Chapter 4: Belief and Method; Introduction; 1. Problems of Pragmatism and Pragmatic Responses; 2. Peirce's Theory of Belief, Doubt, and Inquiry; 3. Peirce's Comparison of Methods; 4. Difficulties in Peirce's Treatment; 5. An Epistemological Interpretation; 6. The Primacy of Method; Chapter 5: Action and Commitment; Chapter 6: Emotion and Cognition1. Emotions in the Service of Cognition2. Cognitive Emotions; IndexWorlds of Truth: A Philosophy of Knowledge explicates and builds upon a half century of philosophical work by the noted philosopher Israel Scheffler.Propounds a new doctrine of plurealism which maintains the existence of multiple real worldsOffers a defense of absolute truth, which denies certainty and eschews absolutism, and defends systematic relativity, objectivity, and fallibilismEmphasizes a wide range of pragmatic interests: epistemology and scientific development, cognition and emotion, science and ethics, ritual and culture, and art and scienKnowledge, Theory ofPhilosophyKnowledge, Theory of.Philosophy.121Scheffler Israel50404MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9911019555303321Worlds of truth4422804UNINA