Giving Hostages to Irrationality?
Peter Winch, following Wittgenstein, was critical of the notion that philosophy could pass judgment on matters like the sense of words, the rationality of actions, or the validity of arguments. His critique had both what we might call a local strand – the insight that criteria of thought and action...
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Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
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Nordic Wittgenstein Society
2018-01-01
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Series: | Nordic Wittgenstein Review |
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Online Access: | https://www.nordicwittgensteinreview.com/article/view/3463 |
Summary: | Peter Winch, following Wittgenstein, was critical of the notion that philosophy could pass judgment on matters like the sense of words, the rationality of actions, or the validity of arguments. His critique had both what we might call a local strand – the insight that criteria of thought and action are not universal but vary between cultures and between practices – and a personal strand – the insight that those local criteria are ultimately given shape through the particular applications made of them by individuals. These strands are prominent, for instance, in Winch’s discussion of cross-cultural understanding as well as his treatment of the distinction between valid reasoning and illicit persuasion.
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ISSN: | 2194-6825 2242-248X |