excellent new book...anyone who makes the effort to read this book is likely to be rewarded with many new insights.

Bart Streumer, Times Literary Supplement

This book has been long in the making and it is no exaggeration to say that it was worth the wait ... hugely impressive ... In scope and ambition, The Retreat of Reason is comparable to modern classics such as Derek Partif's Reasons and Persons and Nagel's The View from Nowhere ... More important still, The Retreat of Reason matches these seminal works in terms of philosophical sophistication and rigour of argument. It is an enlightening as well as a fulfilling read.

Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews

One of the main original aims of philosophy was to give us guidance about how to live our lives. The ancient Greeks typically assumed that a life led in accordance with reason, a rational life, would also be the happiest or most fulfilling. Ingmar Persson's book resumes this project, which has been largely neglected in contemporary philosophy. But his conclusions are very different; by exploring the irrationality of our attitudes to time, our identity, and our responsibility, Persson shows that the aim of living rationally conflicts not only with the aim of leading the most fulfilling life, but also with the moral aim of promoting the maximization and just distribution of fulfilment for all. Persson also argues that neither the aim of living rationally nor any of the fulfilment aims can be rejected as less rational than any other. We thus face a dilemma of either having to enter a retreat of reason, insulated from everyday attitudes, or making reason retreat from its aspiration to be the sole controller of our attitudes. The Retreat of Reason explores three areas in which there is a conflict between the rational life and a life dedicated to maximization of fulfilment. Persson contends that living rationally requires us to give up, first, our temporal biases; secondly, our bias towards ourselves; and, thirdly, our responsibility to the extent that it involves the notion of desert and desert-entailing notions. But giving up these attitudes is so overwhelmingly hard that the effort to do so not only makes our own lives less fulfilling, but also obstructs our efficient pursuit of the moral aim of promoting a maximum of justly distributed fulfilment. Ingmar Persson brings back to philosophy the ambition of offering a broad vision of the human condition. The Retreat of Reason challenges and disturbs some of our most fundamental ideas about ourselves.
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By exploring the irrationality of our attitudes to time, identity, and responsibility, this book shows that the aim of living rationally conflicts not only with the aim of leading the most fulfilling life, but also with the moral aim of promoting the maximization and just distribution of fulfilment for all.
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I. THE NATURE OF PARA-COGNITIVE ATTITUDES ; II. REASON AND VALUE ; III. RATIONALITY AND TEMPORAL NEUTRALITY ; IV. RATIONALITY AND PERSONAL NEUTRALITY ; V. RATIONALITY AND RESPONSIBILITY ; CONCLUSION
The magnum opus of one of Europe's leading philosophers A highly original and challenging view of human nature Revives the classic philosophical question: how we should live our lives? Hugely ambitious and wide-ranging exploration of morality, emotion, rationality, identity, freedom, & responsibility
Les mer
The magnum opus of one of Europe's leading philosophers A highly original and challenging view of human nature Revives the classic philosophical question: how we should live our lives? Hugely ambitious and wide-ranging exploration of morality, emotion, rationality, identity, freedom, & responsibility
Les mer

Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9780199276905
Publisert
2005
Utgiver
Oxford University Press; Oxford University Press
Vekt
1057 gr
Høyde
255 mm
Bredde
178 mm
Dybde
33 mm
Aldersnivå
P, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
502

Forfatter