Description

Book Synopsis
The book sees to show that the present discussion so unfolds as to show that ultimately Reality's inherent impetus to lawful order serves also to account for its existence. The ultimate explanation of its order is as something that also provides for its reason for being. Step by step, a train of thought unfolds to indicate that Reality both exists and has the nature it does for good reason, and specifically because this is somehow for the best. Such an approach goes back to the Platonism of classical antiquity. Many difficulties lie in the way of its acceptance. But is it, in the final analysis, the theory that works here takes the form of a Neo-Platonism of sorts. Or if reality has any rational explanation at all, it is one that will have to proceed along these lines, based upon rationality itself.An underlying theme that runs throughout the present elaboration of metaphysics is the dialectic of interaction between descriptive facts on the one hand and normative ideals on the other.

Trade Review
Rescher's Understanding Reality is wide-ranging, expert and impressive. His main verdict is particularly interesting: What makes the world intelligible, he concludes, is that its existence “is somehow for the best”, as Plato and Leibniz suggested. -- John Leslie, Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada
The breadth of Understanding Reality: Metaphysics in Epistemological Perspective matches that of its title, and very few philosophers could even approach its combination of subtlety and readability. Nicholas Rescher’s treatment of control is an impressive example—it ranges from important points in action theory to what he aptly calls “the ethics of control,” which concerns how control of conduct figures in our moral responsibility for it. The discussions of simplicity, uncertainty, understanding, and other topics are also illuminating. This book has numerous insights, and it will reward not only readers in metaphysics and epistemology but also those interested in a wide but nicely nuanced treatment of topics in the philosophy of science. -- Robert Audi, John A. O'Brien Professor of Philosophy, University of Notre Dame

Table of Contents
Introduction 1. Reality 2. Consciousness 3. Control Issues 4. Reality’s Intelligible Order 5. The Role of Technology in Natural Science 6. Oversimplification 7. Overcomplication 8. Quantitative Epistemology 9. Information Iniquities 10. Managing Uncertainty 11. The Paradox of Inquiry 12. Prediction, Fashion, and Futurity in the Philosophy of Science 13. Probative Homogeneity in Rational Substantiation 14. Teleology and Chance 15. Explaining Existence References

Understanding Reality

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    A Hardback by Distinguished University Professor of Philosophy University of Pittsburgh, Rescher Nicholas

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      View other formats and editions of Understanding Reality by Distinguished University Professor of Philosophy University of Pittsburgh, Rescher Nicholas

      Publisher: Lexington Books
      Publication Date: 1/15/2018 12:08:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9781498585101, 978-1498585101
      ISBN10: 1498585108

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      The book sees to show that the present discussion so unfolds as to show that ultimately Reality's inherent impetus to lawful order serves also to account for its existence. The ultimate explanation of its order is as something that also provides for its reason for being. Step by step, a train of thought unfolds to indicate that Reality both exists and has the nature it does for good reason, and specifically because this is somehow for the best. Such an approach goes back to the Platonism of classical antiquity. Many difficulties lie in the way of its acceptance. But is it, in the final analysis, the theory that works here takes the form of a Neo-Platonism of sorts. Or if reality has any rational explanation at all, it is one that will have to proceed along these lines, based upon rationality itself.An underlying theme that runs throughout the present elaboration of metaphysics is the dialectic of interaction between descriptive facts on the one hand and normative ideals on the other.

      Trade Review
      Rescher's Understanding Reality is wide-ranging, expert and impressive. His main verdict is particularly interesting: What makes the world intelligible, he concludes, is that its existence “is somehow for the best”, as Plato and Leibniz suggested. -- John Leslie, Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada
      The breadth of Understanding Reality: Metaphysics in Epistemological Perspective matches that of its title, and very few philosophers could even approach its combination of subtlety and readability. Nicholas Rescher’s treatment of control is an impressive example—it ranges from important points in action theory to what he aptly calls “the ethics of control,” which concerns how control of conduct figures in our moral responsibility for it. The discussions of simplicity, uncertainty, understanding, and other topics are also illuminating. This book has numerous insights, and it will reward not only readers in metaphysics and epistemology but also those interested in a wide but nicely nuanced treatment of topics in the philosophy of science. -- Robert Audi, John A. O'Brien Professor of Philosophy, University of Notre Dame

      Table of Contents
      Introduction 1. Reality 2. Consciousness 3. Control Issues 4. Reality’s Intelligible Order 5. The Role of Technology in Natural Science 6. Oversimplification 7. Overcomplication 8. Quantitative Epistemology 9. Information Iniquities 10. Managing Uncertainty 11. The Paradox of Inquiry 12. Prediction, Fashion, and Futurity in the Philosophy of Science 13. Probative Homogeneity in Rational Substantiation 14. Teleology and Chance 15. Explaining Existence References

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