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Anthropocentrism in philosophy - 8

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Anthropocentrism in philosophy is deeply paradoxical.

Ethics investigates the human good, epistemology investigates human knowledge, and antirealist metaphysics holds that the world depends on our cognitive capacities.

But humans’ good and knowledge, including their language and concepts, are empirical matters, whereas philosophers do not engage in empirical research. And humans are inhabitants, not 'makers', of the world.

Nevertheless, all three (ethics, epistemology, and antirealist metaphysics) can be drastically reinterpreted as making no reference to humans.

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£95.50
Product Details
De Gruyter
1614519471 / 9781614519478
eBook (EPUB)
128
19/05/2015
Germany
English
254 pages
Copy: 10%; print: 10%
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