Knowledge and Postmodernism in Historical PerspectiveJoyce Appleby, Elizabeth Covington, David Hoyt, Michael Latham, Allison Sneider This comprehensive reader chronicles the western engagement with the nature of knowledge during the past four centuries while providing the historical context for the postmodernist thought of Jacques Derrida, Michel Foucault, Richard Rorty and Hayden White, and the challenges their ideas have posed to our conventional ways of thinking, writing and knowing. |
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Page 7
... situation , as to be without any wish of alteration or improvement of any kind . " 2 As one commentator remarked , " being of a Newtonian disposition to use his imagination and systematize his thought ... Smith perceived order beneath ...
... situation , as to be without any wish of alteration or improvement of any kind . " 2 As one commentator remarked , " being of a Newtonian disposition to use his imagination and systematize his thought ... Smith perceived order beneath ...
Page 17
... situation is that the Enlightenment , more than any other body of social thought , hid its roots and denied its historical genesis . It is the one ideology whose partisans — often ranging themselves behind the protective shield of ...
... situation is that the Enlightenment , more than any other body of social thought , hid its roots and denied its historical genesis . It is the one ideology whose partisans — often ranging themselves behind the protective shield of ...
Page 26
... situation , Hobbes concluded that men would erect governments to impose order on the inherently dangerous human qualities he saw expressed in the violence of the English Civil War and its struggle between the king and Parliament . In ...
... situation , Hobbes concluded that men would erect governments to impose order on the inherently dangerous human qualities he saw expressed in the violence of the English Civil War and its struggle between the king and Parliament . In ...
Page 66
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Contents
29 | |
JOHN LOCKE | 50 |
ADAM SMITH | 61 |
IMMANUEL KANT | 105 |
ERNST CASSIRER | 123 |
Introduction | 137 |
ALEXIS DE TOCQUEVILLE | 145 |
KARL MARX | 164 |
JOHN DEWEY | 265 |
RUTH BENEDICT | 279 |
CLAUDE LÉVISTRAUSS | 296 |
CLIFFORD GEERTZ | 309 |
MAX HORKHEIMER AND THEODOR ADORNO | 324 |
Introduction | 385 |
HAYDEN WHITE | 393 |
Introduction | 489 |
FRIEDRICH NIETZSCHE | 189 |
MAX WEBER | 213 |
NORMAN BIRNBAUM | 245 |
Suggestions for Further Reading | 555 |
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action activity appears authority become beginning belief called capitalism cause century civilization claim common concept concern consider constitutes continue course critical culture determined discourse distinction economic effect Enlightenment equally example existence experience expression fact force give hand human ideas important individual institutions interest interpretation kind knowledge labour language laws learning less living material matter means method mind moral narrative nature necessary never notion object observation opinion origin particular person philosophy political possible postmodernism practice present principle problem production progress question rational reality reason reference relation represent rules scientific seems sense social society sort speak specific sphere structure theory things thought tion tradition true truth turn understanding universal whole