Abstract

Resenha de / Review of Maxwell, N. (2014) Global philosophy: Whatphilosophy ought to be? Exeter, UK: Imprint­Academic, Societas – Essays in Political & CulturalCriticism. (Pb, pp.192. ISBN 9781845407674)Este texto trata de uma resenhado livro de Nicholas Maxwell (2014),Global philosophy: What philosophyought to be? Exeter, UK: Imprint­Academic, Societas – Essays in Political& Cultural Criticism. Neste livro,Nicholas Maxwell rediscute a maior partedas ideias, argumentos e positcoes que eletem defendido com muito esforco nosultimos 40 anos. Neste programa,podemos ler sobre suas concepcoes de oque a filosofia devia ser, sobre a naturezada ciencia e seu progresso, como melhortratar do emprirismo e da racionalidade,sua visao sobre a historia e a filosofia daciencia, sobre a filosofia e a historia dafilosofia, e a natureza da pesquisa(academica), entre outras.

Highlights

  • RESUMO: Este texto trata de uma resenha do livro de Nicholas Maxwell (2014), Global philosophy: What philosophy ought to be? Exeter, UK: Imprint­Academic, Societas – Essays in Political & Cultural Criticism

  • Nicholas Maxwell revisits for the most part ideas, arguments, and positions he has been defending quite forcefully for the past 40 years or so. These include his conceptions of what philosophy ought to be, about the nature of science and its progress­making features, how to best construe empiricism and rationality, his take on the history and philosophy of science, on philosophy and the history of philosophy, the nature of inquiry, and his position about the role of education and the university more generally in view of his rather pessimistic yet compellingly realistic diagnosis of the problems and challenges confronting our world at this point in our history

  • There is a sense in which wisdom­inquiry fuses these together in the one basic aim of seeking and promoting wisdom – wisdom being the capacity, and perhaps the active desire, to realize what is of value in life, for oneself and for others; wisdom including knowledge and technological know­how but much else besides (103)

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Introduction

RESUMO: Este texto trata de uma resenha do livro de Nicholas Maxwell (2014), Global philosophy: What philosophy ought to be? Exeter, UK: Imprint­Academic, Societas – Essays in Political & Cultural Criticism. These include his conceptions of what philosophy ought to be, about the nature of science and its progress­making features, how to best construe empiricism and rationality, his take on the history and philosophy of science, on philosophy and the history of philosophy, the nature of (academic) inquiry, and his position about the role of education and the university more generally in view of his rather pessimistic yet compellingly realistic diagnosis of the problems and challenges confronting our world at this point in our history.

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