Skepticism

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Temple University Press, 2010 M06 18 - 288 páginas

Aryeh Botwinick argues for the recovery of a radical democratic tradition that emphasizes the role of individual participation in the development and control of social and political institutions. Such involvement implies philosophical skepticism—the assumption that the truth about what is the best course of action cannot be known with certainty and that, therefore, every person’s opinion has an equal claim to be considered. The crucial stumbling block to reappropriating this radical egalitarian tradition is the supposed unviability of a consistent skepticism. In an effort to chart a new course of philosophical inquiry into political matters, Botwinick grapples with the formulation of a consistent version of skepticism, claiming that it provides "a continually renewing impetus for the expansion of political participation."

Twentieth-century philosophers have, for the most part, opted for some version of mitigated skepticism, which, the author argues, "has blinded them to the radical political implications of skepticism." Underscoring a pattern of convergence between Anglo-American and Continental philosophy, Botwinick proposes a number of strategies to rehabilitate the rationality of participatory democratic political institutions by articulating an acceptable version of consistent skepticism.

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Contenido

1 Introduction
3
2 A Neopragmatist Defense of Democratic Participation
25
3 The Poltical Implications of Wittgensteins Skepticism
43
4 Participation and Tacit Knowledge in Plato Machiavelli and Hobbes
61
5 The Role of Tacit Knowledge in the Argument of Federalist Number Ten
119
6 Leadership Knowledge and Truth in Gramscis Political Thought
133
7 Nietzsche Foucault and the Prospects of Postmodern Political Philosophy
181
Convergences between the Premodern and the Postmodern
213
Notes
235
Index
259
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Aryeh Botwinick, Associate Professor of Political Science at Temple University, is the author of seven books, including Democracy and Scarcity, Power and Empowerment: A Radical Theory of Participatory Democracy (with Peter Bachrach), and Postmodernism and Democratic Theory.

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