The Multiplicity of Interpreted Worlds: Inner and Outer Perspectives
By (Author) Donald A. Crosby
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Lexington Books/Fortress Academic
23rd February 2022
United States
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Cognition and cognitive psychology
Religion and science
149
Hardback
164
Width 160mm, Height 227mm, Spine 19mm
422g
In The Multiplicity of Interpreted Worlds: Inner and Outer Perspectives, Donald A. Crosby examines whether there is such a thing as an uninterpreted, unitary, in-itself world or if all claims about the worldwhether scientific historical, cultural, communal, or individualare necessarily partial and limited. If the latter is so, then ultimately many different worlds call for recognition, ranging in scope and reliability, but none of themincluding those of the most allegedly "hard" scienceeither is or can be free of the limitations, disagreements, and fallibilities among even the most qualified experts in a particular field of investigation. The inward and the outward, the subjective and the objective, are thus crucially dependent on one another, and neither is finally intelligible as such apart from the other. Crosby argues that there is no such thing as a completely objective view of the world. This observation is pertinent to our treatment of other natural beings and their ecological domains because it makes us aware that they too have different relations to and perspectives on their environments or worlds in a manner similar to our own irreducibly different outlooks on such worlds from within.
Donald A. Crosby is professor of philosophy emeritus of Colorado State University.