The capacity for reasonable argument about practical and political
matters is important to our daily lives. Yet what does arguing really
involve? Often, our very concept of what it is to argue seems
systematically distorted. Practical, political arguing is too often
stylized as hyper-cognitive, ending by treating people as objects
rather than other selves — in ways that are fundamentally
unreasonable.
This book examines what follows from seeing people as deliberating and
acting in ways that intertwine a variety of emotional and evaluative
processes and effects of virtue or character. From this point of view,
practical arguing involves not just cognition, emotion, and virtue,
but also practices, including imaginative practices. Politics of
Practical Reasoning: Integrating Action, Discourse and Argument uses
these ideas to interrogate ways in which reasoning is bound up with
the interrelated lives that human beings lead in their everyday,
public and political worlds.
We build here on efforts to re-concretize practical reasoning in
modern traditions linked to phenomenology and Wittgensteinian thought,
also referring back to Aristotle and the Stoics in classical times.
Medieval theologians and philosophers such as Aquinas confront the
same issue, as do Enlightenment thinkers such as Smith and Kant. Using
the history of philosophical thought as one of our major sources, the
contributors sympathize with the link underscored between
interpretation, tradition and reasoning by Gadamer, the stress placed
on communicative and emancipatory action by Habermas, and
MacIntyre’s notion of praxis as highlighting deliberation within
communities. All these approaches respond to practical reasoning as
practical.
Building on these points of view, the volume both explores what
practical reasoning itself means, and applies it to particular
questions: what it means to respond to arguments about meaningful work
or disability, or how to debate institutional ethics or art. None of
these debates is susceptible to exclusively cognitive or technical
solutions; this does not mean abandoning them to unreason.
Practical and political reasoning is examined here from an
appropriately broad spectrum of approaches, founded in a concern for
what human reasoning can justifiably be expected to involve, and what
justifying it can reasonably be expected to achieve.
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Integrating Action, Discourse, and Argument
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9798216325291
Publisert
2025
Utgave
1. utgave
Utgiver
Bloomsbury USA
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter