Aristotle and Rational Discovery: Speaking of Nature
By (Author) Dr Russell Winslow
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Continuum International Publishing Group Ltd.
3rd July 2007
United Kingdom
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
185
Hardback
160
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
300g
In this lively and original book, Russell Winslow pursues a new interpretation of logos in Aristotle. Rather than a reading of rationality that cleaves human beings from nature, this new interpretation suggests that, for Aristotle, consistent and dependable rational arguments reveal a deep dependency upon nature. To this end, the author shows that a rational account of a being is in fact subject to the very same principle that governs the physical motion and generation of a being under inquiry. Among the many consequences of this argument is a rejection of both of the prevailing oppositional claims that Aristotle's methodological procedure of discovery is one resting on either empirical or conceptual grounds: discovery reveals a more complex structure than can be grasped by either of these modern modes. Further, Winslow argues that this interpretation of rational discovery also contributes to the ethical debates surrounding Aristotle's work, insofar as an ethical claim is achieved through reason, but is not thereby conceived as objective. Again, the demand for agreement in ethical/political decision will be disclosed as superseding in its complexity both those accounts of ethical decision as subjective (for example, "emotivist" accounts) and those as objective ("realist" accounts).
Russell Winslow is a post-doctoral fellow at St. John's College, Santa Fe, USA. He has a PhD in Philosophyfrom the New School for Social Research, where he was awarded the Hans Jonas Outstanding Dissertation Award in Philosophy.