Forbidden Knowledge And Other Essays on the Philosophy of Cognition / by N. Rescher.

This volume collects together eleven essays in epistemology, written during the past three years. They are mostly unpublished, just four of them having appeared previously (numbers two, three, four and eleven). Detailed acknowledgement of prior publication is made in the notes to the relevant chapte...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Rescher, N. (Author)
Corporate Author: SpringerLink (Online service)
Format: eBook
Language:English
Published: Dordrecht : Springer Netherlands : Imprint: Springer, 1987.
Edition:1st ed. 1987.
Series:Episteme, A Series in the Foundational, Methodological, Philosophical, Psychological, Sociological, and Political Aspects of the Sciences, Pure and Applied ; 13
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Table of Contents:
  • One/Forbidden Knowledge: Moral Limits of Scientific Research
  • 1. A Range of Positions
  • 2. Regulation vs. Laissez Faire
  • 3. Moral Limits Pertain to Different Aspects of Knowledge
  • 4. Can Knowledge as Such be Morally Inappropriate?
  • 5. Knowledge is Only One Good among Others
  • 6. The Enforcement of Morals
  • 7. Coda
  • Two/Truth as Ideal Coherence
  • 1. The ‘Continuity Condition’ Relating a Criterion to the Definition of Truth
  • 2. Truth as Ideal Coherence
  • 3. Coherentism and Truth as Adequation
  • 4. Postscript: The Gap Between the Real and the Ideal
  • Three/Rationality and Consistency
  • 1. Consistency: Initial Requisite or Ultimate Ideal?
  • 2. Linearly Inferential vs. Dialectically Cyclic Reasoning
  • 3. Ampliative vs. Reductive Reasoning
  • 4. Two Very Different Sorts of Acceptability: Qualified vs. Outright Belief
  • 5. Different Attitudes Towards Consistency
  • 6. The Place of Dialectics in the Human Sciences
  • 7. Must Inconsistency-Tolerance Be Motivated Epistemically?
  • 8. Consistency as a Cognitive Ideal
  • Four/An End to Science?
  • 1. Is Scientific Discovery an Inherently Bounded Venture?
  • 2. Nature Might Exhibit an Unending Complexity of Physical Constitution
  • 3. Nature Might Exhibit an Unending Complexity of Lawful Comportment
  • 4. The Phenomena of Nature Might Be Unendingly Diverse
  • 5. The Basis for an Unending Prospect of Scientific Discovery Might Lie Wholly in the Character of Our Inquiry Processes
  • 6. The Regulative Rationale for Supposing the Cognitive Inexhaustibility of Nature
  • Five/On the Probabilistic Bearing of Testimony
  • 1. Introduction
  • 2. The Reliability of Sources
  • 3.The Knowledgeability of Sources
  • 4. Some Variations
  • 5. A Survey of Probative Virtues
  • 6. The Taxicab Problem
  • 7. Hume and Laplace on Human Testimony
  • 8. Laplace on Testimonial Chains
  • 9. The Moral of the Story
  • Six/The Limits of Probabilistic Epistemology
  • 1. The Probabilist Program
  • 2. Probability Is Not Enough
  • Seven/The Threefold Way
  • 1. The Three Levels
  • 2. Some Examples
  • 3. Man as a Creature of the Threefold Way
  • 4. The Question of Legitimacy: The Utility of the Ideal
  • Eight/Number Idolatry and Fallacies of Quantification
  • Nine/Life’s Seasons: The Conceptual Phenomenology of Age-Periodization
  • 1. The General Idea of a Life Cycle
  • 2. The Rationale of Human Age-Periodization Phase Transitions
  • 3. The Diversity of Age
  • 4. The Conventionality of Phase Transition
  • 5. Thought Experiments
  • 6. The Upshot
  • 7. Broader Vistas
  • Ten/Philosophical Taxonomy as A Philosophical Issue
  • 1. The Shape of Philosophy: Some Ancient Views
  • 2. The Middle Ages and Early Modern Times
  • 3. A Later Picture
  • 4. Taxonomic Dynamics
  • 5. The Post-Kantian Transformation
  • 6. Taxonomic Proliferation
  • 7. The Contemporary Situation
  • 8. The Problem of Progress
  • 9. The Dialectic of the Individual and the Community
  • 10. Conclusion
  • Eleven/Is Philosophy a Guide to Life?
  • 1. Philosophy: The Problematic Guide
  • 2. The Problem of ‘Applied Philosophy’: Only One’s Own Philosophy Can Provide Guidance
  • 3. What Philosophy Per Se Can Contribute
  • 4. Some Examples of ‘Applied Philosophy’ in the Public Domain
  • 5. The Limited Utility of Methodological Applications
  • 6. A Danger of ‘Applied Philosophy’
  • Notes
  • Index of Names.