A work in the history of systematic philosophy that
is itself animated by a systematic philosophic
aspiration, this book by one of the most prominent
American philosophers working today provides an entirely
new way of looking at the development of Western
philosophy from Descartes to the present. Brandom begins
by setting out an historical context and outlining a
methodological rationale for his enterprise. Then, in
chapters on Spinoza, Leibniz, Hegel, Frege, Heidegger
and Sellars, he pursues the most fundamental
philosophical issues concerning intentionality, and
therefore mindedness itself, revealing an otherwise
invisible set of overlapping themes and explanatory
strategies. Variously functionalist, inferentialist,
holist, normative and social pragmatist in character,
the explanations of intentionality offered by these
philosophers, taken together, form a distinctive
tradition. The fresh perspective afforded by this
tradition enriches our understanding of the
philosophical topics being addressed, provides a new
conceptual vantage point for viewing our philosophical
ancestors, and highlights central features of the sort
of rationality that consists in discerning a
philosophical tradition - and it does so by elaborating
a novel, concrete instance of just such an
enterprise.
|
|