Reason and Reasonabless [sic]This volume contains the proceedings of the Fourth Ital- ian/American Philosophy Meeting, based on the theme "Reason and Reasonableness." The essays argue that to be reasonable no longer means to follow steady rules. Instead, it means to try to understand different point of views and widen our cultural criteria in order to find a common evaluation. Riccardo Dottori is a professor of philosophy at the University of Rome (Rome Torgate). |
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Índice
I | 11 |
II | 17 |
III | 19 |
IV | 35 |
V | 37 |
VI | 47 |
VII | 71 |
VIII | 89 |
XVII | 229 |
XVIII | 241 |
XIX | 257 |
XX | 273 |
XXI | 285 |
XXII | 287 |
XXIII | 295 |
XXIV | 325 |
IX | 127 |
X | 129 |
XI | 159 |
XII | 167 |
XIII | 175 |
XIV | 177 |
XV | 191 |
XVI | 205 |
XXV | 333 |
XXVI | 347 |
XXVII | 387 |
XXVIII | 389 |
XXIX | 399 |
XXX | 407 |
XXXI | 441 |
Palavras e frases frequentes
according adventure aesthetic answer argument becoming beginning bioethics called claim common concept condition considered construct context course critical cultural distinction dogs dogs bark evidence example existed experience expression fact feeling give given happens human idea identity important interest interpretation issue John judgment justification for believing justified in believing Kant kind knowledge language least literary literature lives logic meaning mind moral narrative nature necessary notion object one's organic unity particular person philosophical physical political possible practice premises present Press principle priori priori justified problem proposition purely a priori question rational Rawls reading reason reference reflective relation requires result rules seems sense simply simultaneity social sort story structure theory things thought tion traditional true truth turn understanding University whole Wittgenstein