实用主义伦理学:以问题为基础的解决问题的方法作者:James Jakób Liszka(书评)

IF 0.2 4区 哲学 0 PHILOSOPHY
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Over the past twenty years, numerous philosophers have produced important works on the ethical perspectives and social and political philosophy of the classic thinkers of the pragmatist tradition, including several volumes on John Dewey and William James, and a volume on Charles S. Peirce that James Liszka also published in 2021. However, there exist few general statements of the potential of the pragmatist approach to the topic of ethics in general. For this reason, Liszka's new book outlining pragmatist ethics is welcome. Despite its concise presentation of only about 170 pages, Liszka manages to discuss a number of pragmatist notions and views both in their historical context and in contrast and comparison with contemporary arguments, particularly ones developed in the fields of metaethics and normative ethics of the analytic tradition. As both a scholar and a philosopher, Liszka offers his own perspective on the pragmatist approach and what is unique and distinctive about it. In the introduction, the pragmatist perspective is described as beginning with an examination of actual problems to develop solutions that may reveal what would be good or better than the present, rather than aiming at the development of a concept of the good that could then be applied in particular cases. The remainder of the book can be characterised as developing this notion of ethics through the lenses of philosophical debates, both historical and contemporary, on practical reasoning, community, inquiry, and moral progress. Following the introduction, Liszka presents in the second chapter his pragmatist, problem-based ethics as a response to the \"tragedy of life\", in the sense of an inevitable conflict of goods and values, with the melioristic slogan \"solve problems, and good will follow\". In the third chapter, Liszka delves deeper into the roots of his problem-based ethics by looking at the writings of the classical pragmatists, including Peirce's maxim of pragmatism, James's account of truth as that which brings us into a satisfactory relation with other parts of our experience, Peirce's notion of the community of inquiry, and Dewey's account of democracy as the setting for solving the problems of the community. James Wallace's account of practices as potential solutions for problems provides Liszka with an important stepping stone to his conclusion, drawn at the end of this chapter, that in order to solve problems, practices must aim to attain a good end in the right way. However, this formal conclusion does not provide specific guidance on how problems should be solved. Providing such guidance is the task of practical reason, the subject of chapter four. Liszka's discussion develops pragmatist perspectives on practical reasoning based on Wallace's account, Robert Brandom's distinctions between shapes of practical reasoning, as well as Peirce's account of desire. All of these are brought to [End Page 254] bear in long-standing debates in meta-ethics. In particular, to counter subjectivism and other familiar issues with the Humean desire-belief account of moral motivation (or internalism about moral motivation), Liszka—again drawing from Wallace's notion—argues that practices are not subjective but collectively approved and institutionalised. The presence of problems indicates that something is not working within the practice in question. Pragmatists typically suggest that inquiry could be deployed to solve problems. This is why in chapter five normative science is considered. Liszka's central project is to make sense of the pragmatist stance that moral inquiries and judgments can be made scientific, and that normative claims can be tested by observing the results actually attained. Liszka argues that \"the norms of practical reasoning derive their...","PeriodicalId":45325,"journal":{"name":"TRANSACTIONS OF THE CHARLES S PEIRCE SOCIETY","volume":"201 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.2000,"publicationDate":"2023-03-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"2","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Pragmatist Ethics: A Problem-Based Approach to What Matters by James Jakób Liszka (review)\",\"authors\":\"\",\"doi\":\"10.2979/csp.2023.a906865\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"Reviewed by: Pragmatist Ethics: A Problem-Based Approach to What Matters by James Jakób Liszka Henrik Rydenfelt James Jakób Liszka (Ed) Pragmatist Ethics: A Problem-Based Approach to What Matters Albany: SUNY Press, 2021; 192 pp., incl. index There appears to be increasing interest in public discussion and debate on ethical issues in our societies motivated by concerns regarding economic growth within the limits of the environment, the development [End Page 253] of \\\"autonomous\\\" machines and advances in artificial intelligence, and issues of justice and equality under conditions of global emergencies such as climate change. 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In the introduction, the pragmatist perspective is described as beginning with an examination of actual problems to develop solutions that may reveal what would be good or better than the present, rather than aiming at the development of a concept of the good that could then be applied in particular cases. The remainder of the book can be characterised as developing this notion of ethics through the lenses of philosophical debates, both historical and contemporary, on practical reasoning, community, inquiry, and moral progress. Following the introduction, Liszka presents in the second chapter his pragmatist, problem-based ethics as a response to the \\\"tragedy of life\\\", in the sense of an inevitable conflict of goods and values, with the melioristic slogan \\\"solve problems, and good will follow\\\". In the third chapter, Liszka delves deeper into the roots of his problem-based ethics by looking at the writings of the classical pragmatists, including Peirce's maxim of pragmatism, James's account of truth as that which brings us into a satisfactory relation with other parts of our experience, Peirce's notion of the community of inquiry, and Dewey's account of democracy as the setting for solving the problems of the community. James Wallace's account of practices as potential solutions for problems provides Liszka with an important stepping stone to his conclusion, drawn at the end of this chapter, that in order to solve problems, practices must aim to attain a good end in the right way. However, this formal conclusion does not provide specific guidance on how problems should be solved. Providing such guidance is the task of practical reason, the subject of chapter four. 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引用次数: 2

摘要

审查:实用主义伦理学:一个基于问题的方法是什么重要的詹姆斯Jakób利斯卡亨里克·赖登felt詹姆斯Jakób利斯卡(编辑)实用主义伦理学:一个基于问题的方法是什么重要奥尔巴尼:纽约州立大学出版社,2021;由于对环境限制下的经济增长、“自主”机器的发展和人工智能的进步以及气候变化等全球紧急情况下的正义和平等问题的关注,公众对我们社会中伦理问题的讨论和辩论似乎越来越感兴趣。在过去的二十年里,许多哲学家都发表了关于实用主义传统经典思想家的伦理观点和社会政治哲学的重要著作,包括关于约翰·杜威和威廉·詹姆斯的几卷书,以及詹姆斯·里斯卡也于2021年出版的关于查尔斯·s·皮尔斯的一卷书。然而,很少有关于实用主义方法在一般伦理问题上的潜力的一般性陈述。出于这个原因,里斯卡概述实用主义伦理学的新书受到欢迎。尽管这本书简明扼要,只有170页左右,但Liszka设法讨论了一些实用主义的概念和观点,无论是在它们的历史背景下,还是在与当代论点的对比和比较中,特别是在分析传统的元伦理学和规范伦理学领域中发展起来的观点。作为学者和哲学家,利斯卡对实用主义方法及其独特之处提出了自己的看法。在引言中,实用主义的观点被描述为从对实际问题的检查开始,以开发可能揭示什么是好的或比现在更好的解决方案,而不是旨在发展一种可以在特定情况下应用的好概念。本书的其余部分可以被描述为通过历史和当代哲学辩论的镜头来发展这种伦理观念,包括实践推理、社区、调查和道德进步。在引言之后,利斯卡在第二章中提出了他的实用主义的、以问题为基础的伦理学,作为对“生活悲剧”的回应,在商品和价值观不可避免的冲突的意义上,以改良主义的口号“解决问题,善将随之而来”。在第三章中,Liszka通过查看古典实用主义者的著作,深入研究了他的基于问题的伦理学的根源,包括皮尔斯的实用主义格言,詹姆斯对真理的描述,它使我们与我们经验的其他部分建立了令人满意的关系,皮尔斯的探索共同体的概念,以及杜威对民主作为解决共同体问题的背景的描述。James Wallace关于实践作为问题的潜在解决方案的描述为Liszka的结论提供了一个重要的垫脚石,在本章的末尾,为了解决问题,实践必须以正确的方式达到良好的结果为目标。然而,这一正式结论并未就如何解决问题提供具体指导。提供这样的指导是实践理性的任务,也是第四章的主题。Liszka的讨论发展了实用主义对实践推理的观点,这是基于Wallace的描述,Robert Brandom对实践推理形式的区分,以及Peirce对欲望的描述。所有这些都在元伦理学的长期争论中得到了体现。特别是,为了反对主观主义和其他与休谟关于道德动机的欲望信念解释(或关于道德动机的内在主义)有关的熟悉问题,利斯卡——再次借鉴华莱士的概念——认为实践不是主观的,而是被集体认可和制度化的。问题的出现表明在有问题的实践中有些东西不起作用。实用主义者通常建议,探究可以用来解决问题。这就是为什么在第五章中要考虑规范科学。Liszka的中心项目是让实用主义的立场变得有意义,即道德询问和判断可以成为科学的,规范性的主张可以通过观察实际获得的结果来检验。Liszka认为“实践推理的规范推导出它们的…
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Pragmatist Ethics: A Problem-Based Approach to What Matters by James Jakób Liszka (review)
Reviewed by: Pragmatist Ethics: A Problem-Based Approach to What Matters by James Jakób Liszka Henrik Rydenfelt James Jakób Liszka (Ed) Pragmatist Ethics: A Problem-Based Approach to What Matters Albany: SUNY Press, 2021; 192 pp., incl. index There appears to be increasing interest in public discussion and debate on ethical issues in our societies motivated by concerns regarding economic growth within the limits of the environment, the development [End Page 253] of "autonomous" machines and advances in artificial intelligence, and issues of justice and equality under conditions of global emergencies such as climate change. Over the past twenty years, numerous philosophers have produced important works on the ethical perspectives and social and political philosophy of the classic thinkers of the pragmatist tradition, including several volumes on John Dewey and William James, and a volume on Charles S. Peirce that James Liszka also published in 2021. However, there exist few general statements of the potential of the pragmatist approach to the topic of ethics in general. For this reason, Liszka's new book outlining pragmatist ethics is welcome. Despite its concise presentation of only about 170 pages, Liszka manages to discuss a number of pragmatist notions and views both in their historical context and in contrast and comparison with contemporary arguments, particularly ones developed in the fields of metaethics and normative ethics of the analytic tradition. As both a scholar and a philosopher, Liszka offers his own perspective on the pragmatist approach and what is unique and distinctive about it. In the introduction, the pragmatist perspective is described as beginning with an examination of actual problems to develop solutions that may reveal what would be good or better than the present, rather than aiming at the development of a concept of the good that could then be applied in particular cases. The remainder of the book can be characterised as developing this notion of ethics through the lenses of philosophical debates, both historical and contemporary, on practical reasoning, community, inquiry, and moral progress. Following the introduction, Liszka presents in the second chapter his pragmatist, problem-based ethics as a response to the "tragedy of life", in the sense of an inevitable conflict of goods and values, with the melioristic slogan "solve problems, and good will follow". In the third chapter, Liszka delves deeper into the roots of his problem-based ethics by looking at the writings of the classical pragmatists, including Peirce's maxim of pragmatism, James's account of truth as that which brings us into a satisfactory relation with other parts of our experience, Peirce's notion of the community of inquiry, and Dewey's account of democracy as the setting for solving the problems of the community. James Wallace's account of practices as potential solutions for problems provides Liszka with an important stepping stone to his conclusion, drawn at the end of this chapter, that in order to solve problems, practices must aim to attain a good end in the right way. However, this formal conclusion does not provide specific guidance on how problems should be solved. Providing such guidance is the task of practical reason, the subject of chapter four. Liszka's discussion develops pragmatist perspectives on practical reasoning based on Wallace's account, Robert Brandom's distinctions between shapes of practical reasoning, as well as Peirce's account of desire. All of these are brought to [End Page 254] bear in long-standing debates in meta-ethics. In particular, to counter subjectivism and other familiar issues with the Humean desire-belief account of moral motivation (or internalism about moral motivation), Liszka—again drawing from Wallace's notion—argues that practices are not subjective but collectively approved and institutionalised. The presence of problems indicates that something is not working within the practice in question. Pragmatists typically suggest that inquiry could be deployed to solve problems. This is why in chapter five normative science is considered. Liszka's central project is to make sense of the pragmatist stance that moral inquiries and judgments can be made scientific, and that normative claims can be tested by observing the results actually attained. Liszka argues that "the norms of practical reasoning derive their...
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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.70
自引率
0.00%
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0
期刊介绍: Transactions of the Charles S. Peirce Society has been the premier peer-reviewed journal specializing in the history of American philosophy since its founding in 1965. Although named for the founder of American pragmatism, American philosophers of all schools and periods, from the colonial to the recent past, are extensively discussed. TCSPS regularly includes essays, and every significant book published in the field is discussed in a review essay. A subscription to the journal includes membership in the Charles S. Peirce Society, which was founded in 1946 by Frederic H. Young. The purpose of the Society is to encourage study of and communication about the work of Peirce and its ongoing influence in the many fields of intellectual endeavor to which he contributed.
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