Artigo Revisado por pares

It Is All There: From Reason to Reasoning-in-the-World

2019; Penn State University Press; Volume: 52; Issue: 1 Linguagem: Inglês

10.5325/philrhet.52.1.0093

ISSN

1527-2079

Autores

Thomas Rickert,

Tópico(s)

Narrative Theory and Analysis

Resumo

ABSTRACT The emergence of narratives concerning post-truth, alternative facts, fake news, and the like underpins a felt sense of crisis about the possibility of debate, insofar as argument depends on truth norms. This essay argues that the post-truth narrative is regressive. It depends on Enlightenment-derived standards of truth that were from the beginning impoverished. I argue that rather than appeal nostalgically to the past, we should look to arguments interior to rhetorical history that point to truth norms that include worldly experience, or thereness. Using examples from Protagoras, Johann Georg Hamann, and Maurice Merleau-Ponty, I briefly expand on different ways of conceiving how to marry worldly involvements to our conceptions of knowledge. The world, inclusive of radical technological change, doesn't just shape but takes part in who we are and what we know, say, and do. In this sense, argument and debate are ambient phenomena.

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