Metaphysical Perspectives
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Metaphysical Perspectives

Nicholas Rescher

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Metaphysical Perspectives

Nicholas Rescher

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In Metaphysical Perspectives, Nicholas Rescher offers a grand vision of how to conceptualize, and in some cases answer, some of the most fundamental issues in metaphysics and value theory. Rescher addresses what he sees as the three prime areas of metaphysical concern: (1) the world as such and the architecture of nature at large, (2) ourselves as nature's denizens and our potential for learning about it, and (3) the transcendent domain of possibility and value. Rescher engages issues across a wide range of metaphysical themes, from different worldviews and ultimate questions to contingency and necessity, intelligent design and world-improvability, personhood and consciousness, empathy and other minds, moral obligation, and philosophical methodology. Over the course of this book, Rescher discusses, with his characteristic fusion of idealism and pragmatism, an integrated overview of the key philosophical problems grounded in an idealistically value-oriented approach. His discussion seeks to shed new light on philosophically central issues from a unified point of view.

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NOTES

Chapter 1.Ultimate Questions
1.William L. Rowe, “Two Criticisms of the Cosmological Argument,” The Monist54 (1970); reprinted in Philosophy of Religion: Selective Readings, 2nd ed., ed. W. L. Rowe and W. Wainwright (New York: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1989), 142–56 (see 153). On this principle in its relation to the cosmological ar- gument for the existence of God, see William L. Rowe, The Cosmological Argument(Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1975). See also Richard M. Gale, On the Nature and Existence of God(Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1991), and Alexander R. Pruss, “The Hume-Edwards Principle and the Cosmological Argu- ment,” International Journal for Philosophy of Religion434 (1988): 149–65.
2.Note that neither of these is the same as (∃p)( p@ (∀x)E!x), which obtains trivially given the symbolic conventions adopted here.
3.G. W. Leibniz, Philosophical Papers and Letters, trans. and ed. L. E. Loem- ker (Dordrecht: Reidel, 1969), 487.
4.Ibid., 488.
5.See Arthur Conan Doyle’s story “The Adventures of the Beryl Coronet,” originally published in Strand Magazine, 1892.
6.After all, there is no reason of the nature of a logico-theoretical principle why propositions cannot be self-certifying. Nothing vicious need be involved in self-substantiation. Think of “Some statements are true” or “This statement stakes a particular rather than universal claim.”
7.Optimalism is closely related to optimism. The optimist holds that “Whatever exists is for the best,” whereas the optimalist maintains the converse, “Whatever is for the best exists.” However, when we are dealing with exclusive and exhaustive alternatives, the two theses come to the same thing. If one of the alternatives A, A1, . . . A n must be the case, then if what is realized is for the best, it follows automatically that the best is realized (and conversely).
Chapter 2. World Views
1.Wilhelm Dilthey, Weltanschauungslehre, vol. 8 of Gesammelte Schriften(Stuttgart: Teubner; Göttingen: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, 1961), 86–87. My translation.
2.See Stephen C. Pepper, World Hypotheses: A Study in Evidence(Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press, 1942).
3.For example, Friedrich Paulsen, Richard Müller-Freienfels, and Karl Jaspers.
Chapter 3. Terminological Contextuality
1.Bertrand Russell, Our Knowledge of the External World(London: Allen & Unwin, 1922), 107–8.
2.Arthur Eddington, The Nature of the Physical World(New York: Macmil- lan; Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1929), 126. Wilfrid Sellars’ oft-cited distinction between “the scientific image” and “the manifest image” of things comes straight out of Russell via Eddington.
Chapter 5. Randomness and Reason
This chapter draws upon a paper of the same title published in Symposion: Journal of the Romanian Academy of Science2 (2015): 11–18.
1.See Rebecca Goldstein, Incompleteness: The Proof and Paradox of Kurt Gödel(New York: W. W. Norton, 2005). This was a favorite saying of Einstein’s. In Ronald W. Clark’s Einstein: The Life and Times(New York: World Publishing Company, 1971), it is quoted four times (pp. 19, 69, 113, and 340).
2.Letter to David Bohm of 24 November 1954. See Jeroen van Dongen, Einstein’s Unification(Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2010), 181.
3.Actually, a way of developing relativity theory within the framework of ra- tional mechanics can be found in Arnold Sommerfeld’s Electrodynamics: Lectures in Theoretical Physics, vol. 3, trans. E. G. Ramberg (New York: Academic Press, 1964); German original, Vorlesungen über theoretische Physik(Wiesbaden: Klemm Verlag, 1945). I owe this reference to my colleague Kenneth Schaffner.
4.Alice Calaprice, ed., The Expanded Quotable Einstein(Princeton: Prince- ton University Press, 2000), 260.
5.John Norton has reminded me that search problems such as that of the traveling salesman will often be solved most efficiently by probabilistically geared algorithms.
6.David Bodanis, Einstein’s Greatest Mistake(Boston: Little, Brown and Co., 2016), 206.
7.I revert here to the title of John Rawls’ classic paper “Justice as Fairness.” Is it fair that in American presidential elections the candidate who carries a state by .01 percent of the vote should get 100 percent of that state’s representation in the Electoral College? The answer is an emphatic yes—exactly because the claims at issue are legal claims, and just this is what the law provides for. But the question “Is it just?” is something else again.
Chapter 6. Issues of Self-Reference and Paradox
1.See Aristotle, Soph. Elen. 180a35 and Nicomachaean Ethics1146a71. See also Carl Prantl, Geschichte der Logik im Abendlande, 4 vols. (Graz: Akademische Druck- und Verlagsanstalt, 1955), 1:50–51. According to Cicero, “Si dicis te men- tiri verumque dicis, mentiris” (Academica priora, II, 30.95–96; and compare De divinatione, II, 11).
2.Eubulides’ riddle was discussed not only by Aristotle and Cicero (see the preceding note) but by the Stoics (Prantl, Geschichte, 1:490). In medieval times it was a staple in the extensive discussions of insolubilia. See Prantl, Geschichte, 4:19, 41.
3.Several Greek philosophers, preeminently the Aristotelian Theophrastus and the Stoic Chrysippus, wrote treatises about the Liar Paradox. See Diogenes Laertius, Lives of Eminent Philosophers, V.49 and VII.196. The poet Phietas of Cos is said to have worried himself into an early grave by fretting over it, and its noto- riety was such that even St. Paul adverted to it in Titus1:12–13. The history of the Liar Paradox is discussed in substantial detail in Alexander Rüstow’s Der Lügner: Theorie, Geschichte und Auflösung(Leipzig: B. G. Treubner, 1910; reprinted, New York & London: Garland Publishing Co., 1987).
4.Paul of Venice, in Prantl, Geschichte, 4:139 n. 569.
5.Prantl, Geschichte, 4:37 n. 146.
6.“Socrates dicens, se ipsum dicere falsum, nihil dicit” (Prantl, Geschichte, 4:139 n. 569). A doctrine commonly endorsed in late medieval times was that paradoxical statements are not propositions and for this reason cannot be classified as true or false but must be deemed meaningless. See J. E. Ashworth, Language and Logic in the Post-Medieval Period(Boston: Reidel, 1974), 115, for later endorse- ments of this approach. Thus later writers dismissed insolubilia as not propositions at all but rather “imperfect assertions” (orationes imperfectae). See again Ashworth, Language and Logic, 116.
7.Paul of Venice, in Prantl, Geschichte, 4:138–39.
8.Ibid., 4:139 n. 539.
Chapter 7. Explanation and the Principle of Sufficient Reason
1.On the principle of sufficient reason, see the book of this title by Alexan- der R. Pruss (New York: Cambridge University Press, 2006), whose bibliography gives ample references.
Chapter 8.Intelligent Design Revisited in the Light of Evolutionary Neoplatonism
1.St. Thomas Aquinas characterized this hypostasis as “quod sumatur pro individuo rationalis naturae, ratione suae excellentiae” (Summa Theologiae, I, q. 29, art. 2, ad 1).
2.The literature on intelligent design theory is vast. Some representative works include Robert Dawkins, The Blind Watchmaker: Why the Evidence of Evo- lution Reveals a Universe without Design(New York: Norton Publishing Co., 1986); William A. Dembski, Mere Creation: Science, Faith, and Intelligent Design(Down- ers Grove, IL: InterVarsity Press, 1998); William A. Dembski, The Design Inference: Eliminating Cha...

Inhaltsverzeichnis