Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction: Antirepresentationalism, ethnocentrism, and liberalism
- Part I
- Solidarity or objectivity?
- Science as solidarity
- Is natural science a natural kind?
- Pragmatism without method
- Texts and lumps
- Inquiry as recontextualization: An anti-dualist account of interpretation
- Part II
- PART III
- Index of names
Solidarity or objectivity?
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 June 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction: Antirepresentationalism, ethnocentrism, and liberalism
- Part I
- Solidarity or objectivity?
- Science as solidarity
- Is natural science a natural kind?
- Pragmatism without method
- Texts and lumps
- Inquiry as recontextualization: An anti-dualist account of interpretation
- Part II
- PART III
- Index of names
Summary
There are two principal ways in which reflective human beings try, by placing their lives in a larger context, to give sense to those lives. The first is by telling the story of their contribution to a community. This community may be the actual historical one in which they live, or another actual one, distant in time or place, or a quite imaginary one, consisting perhaps of a dozen heroes and heroines selected from history or fiction or both. The second way is to describe themselves as standing in immediate relation to a nonhuman reality. This relation is immediate in the sense that it does not derive from a relation between such a reality and their tribe, or their nation, or their imagined band of comrades. I shall say that stories of the former kind exemplify the desire for solidarity, and that stories of the latter kind exemplify the desire for objectivity. Insofar as a person is seeking solidarity, she does not ask about the relation between the practices of the chosen community and something outside that community. Insofar as she seeks objectivity, she distances herself from the actual persons around her not by thinking of herself as a member of some other real or imaginary group, but rather by attaching herself to something which can be described without reference to any particular human beings.
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- Information
- Objectivity, Relativism, and TruthPhilosophical Papers, pp. 21 - 34Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1990
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