ABSTRACT

This volume offers critical responses to philosophical naturalism from the perspectives of four different yet fundamentally interconnected philosophical traditions: Kantian idealism, Hegelian idealism, British idealism, and American pragmatism. In bringing these rich perspectives into conversation with each other, the book illuminates the distinctive set of metaphilosophical assumptions underpinning each tradition’s conception of the relationship between the human and natural sciences. The individual essays investigate the affinities and the divergences between Kant, Hegel, Collingwood, and the American pragmatists in their responses to philosophical naturalism. The ultimate aim of Responses to Naturalism is to help us understand how human beings can be committed to the idea of scientific progress without renouncing their humanistic explanations of the world. It will appeal to scholars interested in the role idealist and pragmatist perspectives play in contemporary debates about naturalism.

chapter |20 pages

Introduction

part I|143 pages

Idealist Responses to Naturalism

chapter 1|21 pages

Moral Natural Norms

A Kantian Perspective on Some Neo-Aristotelian Arguments

chapter 2|27 pages

Naturalism and the Primacy of the Practical

Kant on the Form of Theoretical and Practical Reason

part II|125 pages

Pragmatist Responses to Naturalism

chapter 7|17 pages

From the Experimentalist Disposition to the Absolute

Peirce’s Pragmatic Naturalism

chapter 8|24 pages

Common-sense and Naturalism

chapter 10|20 pages

Picturing

Naturalism and the Design of a More Ideal Truth

chapter 11|21 pages

Rethinking Sellars’s Naturalism

chapter 12|19 pages

Pragmatic Naturalism

The Authority of Reason, the Agrippan Trilemma and the Significance of Philosophising in medias res