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Full Description
This is an ambitious and substantial study of metaphysics: its nature and inescapability. Professor Körner's method may be described as 'philosophical anthropology', and aims to arrive at a characterisation of the metaphysical beliefs with which we (have to) operate. Professor Körner begins by describing how the categorical framework of a person's metaphysical beliefs may be embedded in more ordinary beliefs and practical attitudes to the world. He illustrates the variety of such frameworks and describes their role, going on to explain how they may be modified by argument and reflection. This is an independent inquiry, but also the culmination of a series of Professor Körner's earlier works. The writing is extremely clear and the material sensitively controlled, revealing great learning and many suggestive insights and comparisons. It presents overall a comprehensive and carefully thought-out account of metaphysics.
Contents
Preface; Introduction; Part I. On the organisation of beliefs and attitudes: 1. On the cognitive organisation of experience; 2. On the organisation of practical attitudes; 3. On the aesthetic attitudes; 4. Immanent and transcendent philosophy; Part II. On Immanent and Transcendent Metaphysics: 5. The principles of logic as supreme cognitive principles; 6. On mathematical thinking as a possible source of immanent metaphysics; 7. On predictive and instrumental thinking about nature as a possible source of immanent metaphysics; 8. On thinking about persons and mental phenomena as a possible source of immanent metaphysics; 9. On thinking about social phenomena and history as a possible source of immanent metaphysics; 10. On delimiting a person's immanent metaphysics; 11. Transcendent metaphysics and the application of concepts; 12. Transcendent metaphysics and the limits of conceptual thinking; 13. On antimetaphysical errors and illusions; Part III. Stability and Change in Metaphysics: 14. On internal strains; 15. On external pressures exerted by methodological and other arguments; 16. On metaphysical pluralism, intrametaphysical and metaphysical progress; 17. Some speculations about transcendent reality; Summary of Theses; Index.