Ethical & epistemic normativity : Lonergan & virtue epistemology / by Dalibor Renić
- Author:
- Renić, Dalibor, 1977-
- Additional Titles:
- Ethical and epistemic normativity
- Published:
- Milwaukee : Marquette University Press, [2012]
- Copyright Date:
- ©2012
- Physical Description:
- 268 pages ; 22 cm.
- Series:
- Marquette studies in philosophy ; no. 74
- Contents:
- Machine generated contents note: 1.Epistemic Normativity and Ethics: A Status Quaestionis -- 1.1.General Orientation -- 1.1.1.Epistemic Normativity -- 1.1.2.Epistemology and Other Normative Disciplines -- 1.1.3.Ethics of Belief and Intellectual Ethics -- 1.2.Analogies between Epistemic and Ethical Normativity -- 1.2.1.The Fact of Epistemic Evaluation -- 1.2.2.Epistemic Duty -- 1.2.3.Epistemic Teleology -- 1.2.4.Virtue Epistemology -- 1.2.5.Epistemic Value -- 1.3.Difficulties for the Ethical Models of Epistemic Normativity -- 1.3.1.Autonomy of Theoretical Reason -- 1.3.2.Voluntariness of Belief -- 1.4.Status Quaestionis in Lonergan Studies -- 2.Epistemic Normativity in Virtue Epistemology -- 2.1.A Virtue Responsibilist Approach: L. Zagzebski -- 2.1.1.Intellectual and Moral Virtues -- 2.1.2.Specialty of the Intellectual Virtue -- 2.1.3.Practical Wisdom -- 2.1.4.Zagzebski's Theory of Knowledge -- 2.1.5.Virtue Ethics and Epistemic Value -- 2.1.6.Cognitive Agency -- 2.1.7.A Reorientation of Epistemology: R. Roberts & W.J. Wood -- 2.2.A Virtue Reliabilist Approach: E. Sosa -- 2.2.1.Sosa on Epistemic Virtue and Knowledge -- 2.2.2.Epistemic Value and Evaluation -- 2.2.3.Desire for the Truth "As Such"? -- 2.2.4.Epistemic Normativity and Intellectual Ethics -- 2.2.5.Intellectual Ethics and Reflective Knowledge -- 2.3.Nexus -- 3.Lonergan's Cognitional theory -- 3.1.Cognitive Self-Appropriation -- 3.1.1.The Aim of Cognitional theory -- 3.1.2.Cognition and Intentionality -- 3.1.3.Cognition and Consciousness -- 3.1.4.The Desire to Know -- 3.1.5.Bias -- 3.2.Cognitional Structure -- 3.2.1.The Question for Intelligence -- 3.2.2.The Question for Reflection -- 3.2.3.The Question for Deliberation -- 3.2.4.Knowing and Looking -- 3.3.Corollaries -- 4.Lonergan's Epistemology -- 4.1.Theory of Knowledge -- 4.1.1.The Concept of Epistemology -- 4.1.2.The Possibility of Knowledge -- 4.1.3.Knowledge and True Judgment -- 4.2.Epistemic Justification -- 4.2.1.Justification and Reflective Understanding -- 4.2.2.Invulnerability and Virtue -- 4.2.3.Cognitive Authenticity -- 4.2.4.Verification and Truth-Entailment -- 4.3.A Contextualization -- 4.3.1.Lonergan and Foundationalism -- 4.3.2.Coherentism? -- 4.3.3.Lonergan and Reliabilism -- 4.3.4.Lonergan and Virtue Epistemology -- 4.4.Summary -- 5.Epistemic Responsibility and Cognitive Agency -- 5.1.Cognitional Structure and the Will -- 5.1.1.Adjusting the Terminology -- 5.1.2.Experience and the Will -- 5.1.3.Intelligence and the Will -- 5.2.Epistemic Responsibility and Voluntariness in Judgment -- 5.2.1.Judgment, Act and Assent -- 5.2.2.Judgment as Personal Commitment -- 5.2.3.The Will and the Judgments of Fact -- 5.2.4.The Will and the Criteria of Invulnerability -- 5.2.5.Decision in Judgment? -- 5.2.6.Can a Cognitive Subject Be Irrational? -- 5.3.Epistemic Responsibility and Voluntariness in Belief -- 5.3.1.The Notion of Belief -- 5.3.2.The Analysis of Belief -- 5.4.Epistemic Responsibility and Free Will -- 5.4.1.Perspectives on Responsibility -- 5.4.2.Lonergan's Notion of Freedom -- 5.5.Conclusion -- 6.Epistemic Value and Evaluation -- 6.1.Intellectual Good in Insight -- 6.1.1.The Objective of the Intellectual Desire -- 6.1.2.Knowledge as Finality and Perfection of the Subject -- 6.1.3.Intellectual Good and the Ethics of Insight -- 6.2.Intellectual Good in Method -- 6.2.1.Ethics of Method and Its Value-Theory -- 6.2.2.Self-Transcendence and Conversion -- 6.2.3.Intellectual Value and Intentional Feelings -- 6.2.4.Cognitive Self-Transcendence and Intellectual Conversion -- 6.2.5.Cognitive and Moral Self-Transcendence -- 6.2.6.Intellectual Good and Human Good -- 6.3.Conclusions -- 6.3.1.Value of Knowledge -- 6.3.2.Lonergan's Theory of Justification -- 6.3.3.Ethical and Epistemic Evaluation -- Conclusion -- Bibliography -- 1.Works by Bernard J.F. Lonergan -- 2.Works by Other Authors.
- Subject(s):
- ISBN:
- 9780874628098 (pbk. : alk. paper)
0874628091 (pbk. : alk. paper) - Bibliography Note:
- Includes bibliographical references (pages [241]-260) and index.
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