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Paperback Manifesto of a Passionate Moderate: Unfashionable Essays Book

ISBN: 0226311376

ISBN13: 9780226311371

Manifesto of a Passionate Moderate: Unfashionable Essays

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Book Overview

Forthright and wryly humorous, philosopher Susan Haack deploys her penetrating analytic skills on some of the most highly charged cultural and social debates of recent years. Relativism, multiculturalism, feminism, affirmative action, pragmatisms old and new, science, literature, the future of the academy and of philosophy itself--all come under her keen scrutiny in Manifesto of a Passionate Moderate.

"The virtue of Haack's book, and...

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

a breath of fresh air

Haack is to be commended for having compiled these essays and made them available to the educated public. It is refreshing to hear someone "talk sense." A little background on one point: Richard Rorty was an Ordinary Language Philosopher. When it became clear that OLP was exterminating all other schools of thought in philosophy departments by hiring only OLPs, a group calling itself the Committee for Pluralism in Philosophy called the attention of those remaining to this problem. To counter this, some of the OLPs began to take upon themselves the names of the schools that were being extinguished. Rorty chose to call himself a Pragmatist. He never was and never has become a Pragmatist. (Neopragmatists were an outgrowth of classical pragmatism and specialized in the philosophy of science. Prominent names are Sidney Morgenbesser, Hilary Putnam (in his earlier years), W. V. O. Quine, etc.) There is nothing pragmatic or pragmatist about "postmodernism". Haack's main concern in this book is science. For a similar approach focussing on literature, see A Book Worth Reading. This book offers a pragmaticist approach to the philosophy of literature, taken as the question, What makes a book valuable or good?

very good book

This book is written in a very clear and engaging style. Though parts of some of the essays require some background in philosophy, the issues tackled (such as feminism and multiculturalism) are relevant to anyone who cares about the cultural and intellectual life of this country.

What Pragmaticism was supposed to be!!!

Susan Haack is a pragmaticist. Don't let the label fool you. Notice I wrote pragmatICIST, not pragmaTIST. The difference, you ask? Well, in contradistinction to Richard Rorty and Hilary Putnams 'pragmatism' which stresses anti-science and devalues terms like 'objectivity' and 'truth,' Haack is a philosophical descendent of Charles Peirce and John Dewey (begrudginly, I'll throw William James' name in, but that's a stretch). These essays are brilliant defences of the pragmaticist vision of truth, scientific method (or, if we like, methods) and objective knowledge. If all that sounds too philosophical to the average reader, it most likely is not. Haack writes with a down to earth style, a sparkling British wit and a very even flow; especially considering the complexity of some ideas expressed in these pages. It should be mentioned though that although topics covered in these essays include multiculturalism, feminist epistemology, sham reasoning and relativism, this book is much more philosophical in nature than others. Haack is not just another author throwing down the 'science wars' gauntlet (not that it hasn't been thrown down enough already). Whereas most books attacking the abuses of feminism, relativism and postmodern thinking in science, while rightfully exposing their disasterous consequences, end up more as social commentary than actual reasoned arguments; and nary a philosophical arguemt is launched. This is precisely the void that Haack so flawlessly fills. Highlites include a brilliantly constructed 'panel' discussion between 1800's pragmaticist Charles S. Peirce and modern neo-pragmatist Richard Rorty. Haack constructed the dialogue using exerpts of their work and she does a beautiful job making it feel like a discussion. Also, the essay 'Puzzling Out Science' and 'Science as Social' do an excellent job showing that science (contrary to the old Baconian and new 'pragmatist' thought) can be both social and individual. The last two essays deviate a bit from the underlying sceince theme, tackling affirmative action and the absurdities of the academy's expectation that professors (along with masters and doctoral students), to achieve noteriety, must argue the most outlandish theories in the most outlandish way. True to form, these essays are not blank social criticisms so common in books today but are well reasoned, philosophical explorations. The only problem with the book is one common to essay collections. The essays tended to repeat themselves from time to time, not only in ideas (towards the end, you WILL be predicting what Haack's next line will be) but in phrasing. Save for that, flawless!

An antidote to contemporary academia!

Haack's book seeks to respond to the increasingly noisy voices in the academy which are clamoring for all the typical postmodern tenets to be taken as brute fact....the non-existence of any essential anything (especially selves), the pure relativism that chops the universe up into a fractured perspectivalism, and the mistrust for "methodology" of any sort as a "hegemonic discourse." Manifesto of a Passionate Moderate makes an epistemologically sound reply to that academic cacophony; Haack relies on C.S. Peirce's thought to establish the legitimacy of the scientific method, the possibility of the existence of Truth, and the good old-fashioned "wissenschaftlich" approach to philosophy. It is the first time that I have encountered a thinker who manages to balance the commitments of contemporary, liberal academics with traditional philosophical hermeneutics. Well-written, never dry (except when quoting from Peirce!), and generally very refreshing. Anyone in the academy can benefit from her perspective. Bravo to Haack for seeking a responsible end to the posturing and absurdity of so much of the postmodern "platform."

For Self Examination

In this eye-opening collection Susan Haack does, and encourages her readers to do, what everyone gives lip service to but rarely practices: examining one's assumptions on contemporary matters to see if they've been arrived at and are being held rationally...or accidently. Accordingly such areas as feminism, multiculturalism, diversity, etc. are looked at, but here for a change scrutinized with a clear head and through fresh eyes. It's not so much that Ms. Haack has an agenda as that she's concerned the search for truth in these areas pay heed to clear definition, logic, evidence, and proceed out of an unbiased sensibility. Tall but welcome orders for any age and all readers.
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