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Certainty as a Social Metaphor The Social and Historical Production of Certainty in China and the West
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Book Code: GM1417
ISBN: 0-313-31417-9
ISBN-13: 978-0-313-31417-9
304 pages, figures
Greenwood Press
Publication: 11/30/2000
List Price: $131.95 (UK Sterling Price: £75.00)
Availability: Out of stock
Media Type: Hardcover
Trim Size: 6 1/8 x 9 1/4
Subjects:
Series Title: Contributions in Philosophy
Series Number: 79
Reviews:
  • This book is a first-rate contribution to philosophic scholarship, with special reference to comparative epistemology. Copious notes, excellent bibliography, and useful index. Highly recommended to graduate students and research faculty.
    —Choice
    February 2002
  • [T]his is a valuable text for philosophers and anyone working in the human sciences, not excluding those other scientists, such as physicists, biologists and mathmaticians, who might have much to say about its contents. It is densely written and an asset to epistemological literature.
    —Philosophy in Review
    April 2003
  • [T]his book is a powerful one and deserves consideration as we seek for new ways of understanding the world, particularly the future.
    —Futures
    2003
Description: This volume combines philosophy, the social theory of knowledge, and historical analysis to present a comprehensive study of the idea of certainty as defined in the Western and Chinese intellectual traditions. Philosophical ideas such as certainty are the products of deeply layered socio-historical constructions. The author shows how the highly abstract idea of certainty in philosophical discourse is connected to the concrete social process from which the meaning of certainty is derived. Three different versions of certainty--in modern Western thought, in German Idealism, and in traditional Chinese philosophy--are examined in the context of a historical-comparative study of Western and Chinese social processes. Three versions of the idea of certainty are represented by the three distinct philosophical discourse and societies explored in this book. However, the pursuit of certainty transcends culture as a fundamental aspect of philosophical thought. This in-depth study shows how the social genesis and function in philosophy of the specific meaning of certainty has been delineated through a process of complex idealogical negotiation by dominant social groups--the bourgeoisie in modern Western Europe, the nobility and state bureaucrats in 18th- and 19th-century Germany, and the landed gentry in traditional China. The author concludes by suggesting new avenues for study inspired by his research.
Table of Contents:
  • Preface
  • Introduction
  • Certainty from Three Perspectives
  • The Modern Western Version of Certainty
  • German Idealism and the Idea of Certainty in Fichte's Thought
  • The Chinese Version of Certainty
  • Conclusion
  • Bibliography
  • Index
LC Card Number: 00-027634
LCC Class: BD171
Dewey Class: 121
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