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Richard Rorty
Neil Gross
其他書名
The Making of an American Philosopher
出版
University of Chicago Press
, 2009-11-15
主題
Philosophy / General
Biography & Autobiography / Philosophers
ISBN
0226309916
9780226309910
URL
http://books.google.com.hk/books?id=0x3T3fPCqzcC&hl=&source=gbs_api
EBook
SAMPLE
註釋
On his death in 2007, Richard Rorty was heralded by the
New York Times
as “one of the world’s most influential contemporary thinkers.” Controversial on the left and the right for his critiques of objectivity and political radicalism, Rorty experienced a renown denied to all but a handful of living philosophers. In this masterly biography, Neil Gross explores the path of Rorty’s thought over the decades in order to trace the intellectual and professional journey that led him to that prominence.
The child of a pair of leftist writers who worried that their precocious son “wasn’t rebellious enough,” Rorty enrolled at the University of Chicago at the age of fifteen. There he came under the tutelage of polymath Richard McKeon, whose catholic approach to philosophical systems would profoundly influence Rorty’s own thought. Doctoral work at Yale led to Rorty’s landing a job at Princeton, where his colleagues were primarily analytic philosophers. With a series of publications in the 1960s, Rorty quickly established himself as a strong thinker in that tradition—but by the late 1970s Rorty had eschewed the idea of objective truth altogether, urging philosophers to take a “relaxed attitude” toward the question of logical rigor. Drawing on the pragmatism of John Dewey, he argued that philosophers should instead open themselves up to multiple methods of thought and sources of knowledge—an approach that would culminate in the publication of
Philosophy and the Mirror of Nature
, one of the most seminal and controversial philosophical works of our time.
In clear and compelling fashion, Gross sets that surprising shift in Rorty’s thought in the context of his life and social experiences, revealing the many disparate influences that contribute to the making of knowledge. As much a book about the growth of ideas as it is a biography of a philosopher,
Richard Rorty
will provide readers with a fresh understanding of both the man and the course of twentieth-century thought.