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Michel Meyer's Problematology: Questioning and Society: Bloomsbury Studies in Philosophy

Autor Dr Nick Turnbull
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 9 apr 2014
In today's society, everything is in question. The reflexive questioning of modernity has fundamentally problematized society, including philosophy, which has experienced a crisis of metaphysics. Michel Meyer's problematology answers this crisis by questioning questioning, unfolding a new way of doing philosophy, with special relevance for the study of society. In this first-ever extended treatment of Meyer's work, Nick Turnbull examines the main features of problematology, including the principle of questioning and the deduction of an original conception of difference, based on the question-answer relationship. Turnbull shows how these concepts produce new perspectives in the philosophy of the emotions, history, meaning, politics, rhetoric and science. He applies Meyer's ideas to key questions in the philosophy of social science, showing how problematology offers important insights for understanding contemporary society.The book compares problematology with the work of well-known thinkers, including Bourdieu, Castoriadis, Collingwood, Derrida, Dewey, Gadamer, Heidegger and Lyotard. Turnbull uses problematology and rhetoric to explain how meaning is constructed through practice in the negotiation of social distance.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9781472509888
ISBN-10: 1472509889
Pagini: 216
Ilustrații: 10 illus
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 x 14 mm
Greutate: 0.48 kg
Ediția:New.
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Academic
Seria Bloomsbury Studies in Philosophy

Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom

Caracteristici

Explores Meyer's philosophy - 'problematology' - including his argument for questioning as a new metaphysics

Notă biografică

Nick Turnbull is Lecturer in Politics at the University of Manchester, UK.

Cuprins

PrefaceAcknowledgementsList of Abbreviations Introduction: Why Problematology? A New Philosophical Approach to Social Science 1. Problematology: A New Foundation for Reason 2. The Problematological Critique of Post-foundationalism 3. Questioning in the Philosophy of Social Science 4. Questioning, Contingency and Meaning 5. Problematology and the Emotions 6. Rhetoric and Social Distance Conclusion: Problematology and Social InquiryNotesReferencesIndex

Recenzii

'To be human is to question': Nick Turnbull's new book is a welcome and lucid introduction to the theory of problematology - or the philosophy of questioning - created in the last half century by Michel Meyer, professor of Rhetoric in Brussels. It brings a unique and hugely significant contribution of the French-language academy to an English-speaking audience in an accessible and jargon-free account. It opens many questions in its own right and demonstrates the wide application of problematology beyond philosophy per se, to the social and human sciences, to the study of rhetoric and the emotions, and to the arts including theatre and the visual arts.
The author explains the key concepts of problematology, showing his deep acquaintance with Meyer's thought.The book shows problematology both as a classic philosophy seeking foundational grounds and also as a new and original perspective, a new paradigm for thought.It is undoubted that, like all new paradigms, the radical outlook of problematology makes it very difficult to apprehend. But this book contributes strongly to make readers able to understand the key concepts of Meyer's thought and to become aware of its originality and fecundity.
Problematology is a new paradigm in philosophy, arguably the first fully-fledged philosophical conception since the war. Its revolutionary approach grounds thought in questioning: if philosophy has been defined since Socrates as radical questioning, why has questioning not been explicitly questioned? Why has questioning been repressed from thought, and instead propositions and judgments considered as its elementary units? The question-view of philosophy, known as problematology, is the questioning of questioning. It has given rise to a theory of humanity, of language, of emotions, of ethics and rhetoric, and even of history. Nick Turnbull's is undoubtedly the best book to read, if you want to understand what problematology is about. His analysis is crisp, thorough, and relates all of its aspects with one another, shedding special insights on the importance of problematology for the humanities and the social sciences. Questioning is essential in a problematic world and, through its interdisciplinary perspective, Turnbull's book offers droves of perspectives on contemporary thought. The social is defined by the distance between individuals, politics aims to modify it, ethics relates it to good and evil, and rhetoric is how people negotiate the distance between them. Turnbull's book is the synthesis of all those vantage points. A great book written by one of the major social scientist of today.
For Michel Meyer, questioning is fundamental to philosophy, to human creativity and to the organisation of society in general. Nick Turnbull's elegant and lucid exploration illuminates the critical power of Meyer's 'problematology' both as a paradigm of thought and as a tool of social inquiry. This is an important and insightful book that will stimulate discussion -- and questioning -- across the Social Sciences and Humanities.
Long a mainstay for francophone philosophers, Michel Meyer remains unduly unappreciated by English-speaking readers. With his lucid approach and clear prose, Nick Turnbull continues his longstanding efforts to explain the pertinence of Meyer's powerful corpus of work on problematology for philosophers, and also demonstrates the value and profundity of Meyer's wide-ranging thought for a range of research areas including metaphysics, politics, ethics, literature, aesthetics, logic and rhetoric. Emphasizing the importance of viewing questioning, rather than Being, as the starting point from which philosophy can and should, begin, Meyer provides tools to review critical discussions with unexpected insights that, as Turnbull aptly demonstrates in this wonderful book, could reinvigorate studies of society that are currently dominated by a small and, from this perspective, rather narrow cadre of thinkers.