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Document Description
Title
Forgetting
foundationalism
Author
Wellon
,
Christopher
,
1971-
Description
Thesis
(M.A.)--Memorial
University
of
Newfoundland
,
1998.
Philosophy
Date
1997
Pagination
vi, 131 leaves
Subject
Rorty
,
Richard;
Putnam
,
Hilary;
Metaphysics;
Reality
Degree
M.A.
Degree Grantor
Memorial University of Newfoundland. Dept. of Philosophy
Discipline
Philosophy
Language
eng
Notes
Bibliography:
leaves
130-131
Abstract
Foundationalism
is
a
traditional
metaphilosophical
position
which
holds
that
reality
can
be
explained
and
described
absolutely.
Foundationalists
maintain
that
our
questions
about
reality
inquire
beyond
the
capabilities
of
our
ordinary
language
and
that
,
therefore
, these
questions
require
absolute
answers
that are
phrased
in a
metaphysical
vocabulary
which
reaches
beyond
ordinary
language
to an
absolute
reality
or
metaphysical
foundation.
I
maintain
that
we
should
forget
foundationalism
because
the
notion
of a
metaphysical
foundation
is
a
needless
presupposition
that
results
from
incoherent
assumptions
about
the
nature
of
language
and
reference.
--
In
order
to
make
a
case
against
foundationalist
philosophy
I
investigate
its
application
to
traditional
questions
addressed
by
Richard
Rorty
and
Hilary
Putnam
in the
current
realism/antirealism
debate.
I
examine
both
Rorty's
and
Putnam's
critiques
of
metaphysical
realism
,
which
is
a
clear
example
of a
foundationalist
approach
to
questions
about
reality
, and
I
compare
the
kinds
of
nonfoundational
pragmatism
with
which
they
attempt
to
replace
it.
--
Although
Rorty
and
Putnam
agree
that
metaphysical
realism
is
incoherent
,
Putnam
professes
that he
does
not
agree
with
Rorty*s
replacement
-
ethnocentric
pragmatism.
However
,
my
comparison
of
Rorty*s
ethnocentric
pragmatism
with
Putnam's
natural
realism
reveals
that
,
despite
Putnam's
criticism
of
Rorty's
position
,
both
positions
are
remarkably
similar.
In his
arguments
against
metaphysical
realism
Putnam
clearly
recognizes
the
incoherence
of
foundationalism
, but
Putnam's
charge
of
relativism
against
Rorty
contradicts
the
very
arguments
that
Putnam
himself
employs
against
metaphysical
realism.
I
contend
that
Putnam's
discomfort
with
Rorty's
ethnocentrism
suggests
that
Putnam
has not
quite
succeeded
in
forgetting
foundationalism.
--
The
postmodern
recommendation
to
forget
foundationalism
is
not a
new
one;
Wittgenstein
proposed
it
in his
Philosophical
Investigations
fifty
years
ago
and
Rorty
and
Putnam
are
proposing
it
now.
I
am
reiterating
this
recommendation
in
order
to
show
that the
criticism
Rorty
(especially)
and
Putnam
have
received
is
an
unwarranted
and
often
dogmatic
refusal
to
accept
the
limits
of
philosophical
inquiry.
Type
Text
Resource Type
Electronic
thesis
or
dissertation
Format
Image/jpeg;
Application/pdf
Source
Paper copy kept in the Centre for Newfoundland Studies, Memorial University Libraries
Local Identifier
a1266369
Rights
The author retains copyright ownership and moral rights in this thesis. Neither the thesis nor substantial extracts from it may be printed or otherwise reproduced without the author's permission.
Collection
Electronic
Theses
and
Dissertations
Scanning Status
Completed
PDF File
(17.93
MB)
--
http://collections.mun.ca/PDFs/theses/Wellon_Christopher.pdf
CONTENTdm file name
48196.cpd