by D. Z. Phillips (Author)
Ludwig Wittgenstein established a cool stance for philosophy, contemplating the world without meddling in it. D. Z. Phillips explores this position, focusing on its implications for philosophical authorship and the philosophical investigation of the nature of reality.
Influenced by the views of Wittgenstein and his pupil Rush Rhees, Phillips-who is one of Rhees's own students-first contrasts Wittgenstein's methods with Kierkegaard's religiously oriented dialectic. He describes the difficulty in sustaining a contemplative view of philosophy and discusses efforts to go beyond it in the work of Richard Rorty, Stanley Cavell, Annette Baier, and Martha Nussbaum, who, in different ways, propose to make philosophy a guide to living.
A provocative and challenging work, Philosophy's Cool Place is one of the few books that addresses the discipline as an enterprise and explores its relation to moral values, religious belief, and the nature of Reality. By advancing the cause of neutrality, it will stimulate debate and foster discussion of what philosophy is to become in the postmodern era.
Format: Hardcover
Pages: 192
Edition: First Edition
Publisher: Cornell University Press
Published: 14 Apr 1999
ISBN 10: 0801436001
ISBN 13: 9780801436000
Phillips is right to point out that it is increasingly difficult to maintain the integrity of pure, theoretical activity 'in a technological culture that emphasizes finding answers and solutions'. Moreover, it is well worth the noting that some thinkers that explicitly endorse a position of endorsing no position in fact fail to do as they prescribe;... Hypocrisy is as rife among the devotees of mere conversations as it once was among the truth seekers.
* Times Literary Supplement *My admiration of D. Z. Phillips's philosophy of religion has always been considerable, though tempered by virtually diametrical disagreement. But I find this essay, which treats of more general philosophical questions, among the most interesting and perceptive of his publications.
* The Heythrop Journal *