ABSTRACT

Contemporary interest in realism and naturalism, emerging under the banner of speculative or new realism, has prompted continentally-trained philosophers to consider a number of texts from the canon of analytic philosophy. The philosophy of Wilfrid Sellars, in particular, has proven remarkably able to offer a contemporary re-formulation of traditional "continental" concerns that is amenable to realist and rationalist considerations, and serves as an accessible entry point into the Anglo-American tradition for continental philosophers. With the aim of appraising this fertile theoretical convergence, this volume brings together experts of both analytic and continental philosophy to discuss the legacy of Kantianism in contemporary philosophy. The individual essays explore the ways in which Sellars can be put into dialogue with the widely influential work of Quentin Meillassoux, explaining how—even though their methods, language, and proximal influences are widely different—their philosophical stances can be compared thanks to their shared Kantian heritage and interest in the problem of realism. This book will be appeal to students and scholars who are interested in Sellars, Meillassoux, contemporary realist movements in continental philosophy, and the analytic-continental debate in contemporary philosophy.

chapter |19 pages

Introduction

chapter 1|20 pages

After Kant, Sellars, and Meillassoux

Back to Empirical Realism?

chapter 2|26 pages

Sellars and Meillassoux

A Most Unlikely Encounter

chapter 4|21 pages

Speculative Materialism or Pragmatic Naturalism?

Sellars contra Meillassoux

chapter 5|19 pages

How to Know That We Know

The Contemporary Post-Kantian Problem of a Priori Synthetic Judgments

chapter 6|27 pages

Toward the Thing-in-Itself

Sellars’ and Meillassoux’s Divergent Conception of Kantian Transcendentalism

chapter 7|16 pages

A Plea for Narcissus

On the Transcendental Reflexion ∧ Refractive Mediation Tandem

chapter 8|8 pages

Speculating the Real

On Quentin Meillassoux’s Philosophical Realism

chapter 9|22 pages

“It Is Not Until We Have Eaten the Apple”

Forestalling the Necessity of Contingency

chapter 10|34 pages

Puncturing the Circle of Correlation

Rationalism, Materialism, and Dialectics