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The Politics of Survival – Peirce, Affectivity, and Social Criticism: American Philosophy

Autor Lara Trout
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 8 iun 2010
How can sincere, well-meaning people unintentionally perpetuate discrimination based on race, sex, sexuality, or other socio-political factors? To address this question, Lara Trout engages a neglected dimension of Charles S. Peirce's philosophy - human embodiment - in order to highlight the compatibility between Peirce's ideas and contemporary work in social criticism. This compatibility, which has been neglected in both Peircean and social criticism scholarship, emerges when the body is fore-grounded among the affective dimensions of Peirce's philosophy (including feeling, emotion, belief, doubt, instinct, and habit). Trout explains unintentional discrimination by situating Peircean affectivity within a post-Darwinian context, using the work of contemporary neuroscientist Antonio Damasio to facilitate this contextual move. Since children are vulnerable, nave, and dependent upon their caretakers for survival, they must trust their caretaker's testimony about reality. This dependency, coupled with societal norms that reinforce historically dominant perspectives (such as being heterosexual, male, middle-class, and/or white), fosters the internalization of discriminatory habits that function non-consciously in adulthood. The Politics of Survival brings Peirce and social criticism into conversation. On the one hand, Peircean cognition, epistemology, phenomenology, and metaphysics dovetail with social critical insights into the inter-relationships among body and mind, emotion and reason, self and society. Moreover, Peirce's epistemological ideal of an infinitely inclusive community of inquiry into knowledge and reality implies a repudiation of exclusionary prejudice. On the other hand, work in feminism and race theory illustrates how the application of Peirce's infinitely inclusive communal ideal can be undermined by non-conscious habits of exclusion internalized in childhood by members belonging to historically dominant groups, such as the economically privileged, heterosexuals, men, and whites. Trout offers a Peircean response to this application problem that both acknowledges the blind spotsof non-conscious discrimination and recommends a communally situated network of remedies including agapic love, critical common-sensism, scientific method, and self-control.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780823232956
ISBN-10: 0823232956
Pagini: 304
Dimensiuni: 152 x 228 x 15 mm
Greutate: 0.68 kg
Editura: ME – Fordham University Press
Seria American Philosophy


Notă biografică

Lara Trout

Recenzii

"This is a brave book balancing strong scholarship, clear organization, and a provocative reading of Peirce.” Roger Ward, Georgetown College"Examines what is termed a neglected element of embodiment in the philosophy of Charles Sanders Peirce.” The Chronicle of Higher Education"In this important addition to the literatures of pragmatism, social epistemology, and intergroup justice, Trout extends C. S. Peirce’s pragmatist analysis of cognition and inquiry to people’s belief-habits concerning racism and other discriminatory attitudes. . . . Recommended.” Choice

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Brings Peirce and social criticism into conversation