Postanalytic philosophy
Postanalytic philosophy describes a detachment from the mainstream philosophical movement of analytic philosophy, which is the predominant school of thought in English-speaking countries. Postanalytic philosophy derives mainly from contemporary American thought, especially from the works of philosophers Richard Rorty, Donald Davidson, Hilary Putnam, W. V. O. Quine, and Stanley Cavell. The term is closely associated with the much broader movement of contemporary American pragmatism, which, loosely defined, advocates a detachment from the definition of 'objective truth' given by modern philosophers such as Descartes. Postanalytic philosophers emphasize the contingency of human thought, convention, utility, and social progress.
A relatively recent resurgence of interest in ordinary language philosophy, particularly due to the literature and teachings of Cavell, has also become a mainstay of what might be called postanalytic philosophy. Seeking to avoid the increasingly metaphysical and abstruse language found in mainstream analytic philosophy, posthumanism, and post-structuralism, a number of feminist philosophers have adopted the methods of ordinary language philosophy.[1] Many of these philosophers were students or colleagues of Cavell. This approach may be compared and contrasted with neopragmatism,[2] a tradition which owes much to Rorty, although Quine and Wilfrid Sellars may be thought of as precursors of this development.[3]
On "postanalytic philosophy"[]
The term "postanalytic philosophy" itself has been used in a vaguely descriptive sense and not in the sense of a concrete philosophical movement. Many postanalytic philosophers write along an analytic vein and on traditionally analytic topics. Richard Rorty said: "I think that analytic philosophy can keep its highly professional methods, the insistence on detail and mechanics, and just drop its transcendental project. I'm not out to criticize analytic philosophy as a style. It's a good style. I think the years of superprofessionalism were beneficial."[4]
Rorty says the goal of postanalytic philosophy is not to oppose analytic philosophy or its methods, but to dispute its hope to make philosophy the penultimate form of knowledge from which every other knowledge claim must be derived.
Postanalytic philosophy may also be known as post-philosophy,[5] a term used by Rorty, to emphasize the notion that the project of philosophy as conceived by Enlightenment philosophers no longer serves the role it used to in society and that this role has been replaced by other media.
People[]
- Wilfrid Sellars
- Richard Rorty
- Robert Brandom
- Hilary Putnam
- W.V.O. Quine
- Donald Davidson
- Robert B. Pippin
- Richard J. Bernstein
- John McDowell
- A.W. Moore
- Charles Taylor
- G.A. Cohen
- Kwame Anthony Appiah
- Michael E. Rosen
- Cornel West
- Stanley Cavell
- Cora Diamond
- Alice Crary
- Nancy Bauer
- Sally Haslanger
- Paul Crowther
- Shaj Mohan
See also[]
- Post-analytic phenomenology
- Post-Continental philosophy
Notes[]
- ^ http://newliteraryhistory.org/articles/46-2-intro.pdf[bare URL PDF]
- ^ https://ndpr.nd.edu/reviews/the-ironist-and-the-romantic-reading-richard-rorty-and-stanley-cavell/
- ^ https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/pragmatism/
- ^ Eduardo Mendieta, Take Care of Freedom and Truth Will Take Care of Itself, 2005, p. 23
- ^ Christopher J. Voparil, Richard J. Bernstein, The Rorty Reader, John Wiley & Sons, 2010, p. 493.
Further reading[]
- John Rajchman & Cornel West, Post-Analytic Philosophy, Columbia University Press, 1985.
- Analytic philosophy
- Contemporary philosophy
- Philosophical theories