ABSTRACT

Robert Brandom’s rationalist philosophy of language, expounded in his highly influential Making It Explicit, has been the subject of intense scrutiny and debate, establishing him as one of the leading philosophers of his generation. In A Spirit of Trust, Brandom presents the fruits of his thirty-year engagement with Hegel. He submits that the Phenomenology of Spirit holds not only many lessons for today’s philosophy of language, but also a moral lesson much needed in today’s increasingly polarized societies, in the form of a postmodern ethics of trust.

In this outstanding collection, leading philosophers examine and assess A Spirit of Trust. The twelve specially commissioned chapters explore topics including:

  • negation and truth
  • empirical and speculative concepts
  • experience
  • conflict and recognition
  • varieties of idealism
  • premodern ethical life and modern alienation
  • a postmodern ethics of trust.

Reading Brandom: On A Spirit of Trust is essential reading for all students and scholars of Brandom's work and those in philosophy of language. It will also be important reading for those studying nineteenth-century philosophy, particularly Hegel and the Phenomenology of Spirit.

chapter |8 pages

Introduction

part II|103 pages

With an edifying intent

chapter 7|16 pages

Semantic self-consciousness

chapter 8|17 pages

Is Brandom a positivist?

Notes on alienation, trust, confession, and forgiveness

chapter 9|26 pages

Spirit and alienation in Brandom’s A Spirit of Trust

Entfremdung, Entäußerung, and the causal entropy of normativity

chapter 10|18 pages

A pure philosophy of language with an edifying intent

Brandom’s reply to Rorty

chapter 11|14 pages

Brandom on postmodern ethical life

Moral and political problems

chapter 12|10 pages

Brandom’s Hegel