1st Edition

New Essays on Thomas Reid

Edited By Patrick Rysiew Copyright 2015
    264 Pages
    by Routledge

    262 Pages
    by Routledge

    Thomas Reid (1710-96) was a contemporary of both David Hume and Immanuel Kant, and a central figure in the Scottish School of Common Sense. Until recently, his work has been largely neglected, and often misunderstood. Like Kant, Reid cited Hume’s Treatise as the main spur to his own philosophical work. In Reid’s case, this led him to challenge ‘the theory of ideas’, which he saw as the cornerstone of Hume’s (and many other philosophers’) theories. For those familiar with Reid’s work, it is clear that its significance extends well beyond his challenging the theory of ideas.

    The variety of topics which this book covers attests to the richness and variety of Reid’s philosophical contributions, and the persisting relevance of his work to contemporary philosophical debates. The work included in this book, by leading figures in Reid scholarship, deals with aspects of Reid’s views on topics ranging from perception, to epistemology, to ethics and meta-ethics, through to language, mind, and metaphysics. This book was originally published as a special issue of the Canadian Journal of Philosophy.

    1. Introducation

    Patrick Rysiew

    Part I: Perception

    2. Reidian Dual Component Theory Defended

    Todd Buras

    3. Reid’s Response to Hume’s Perceptual Relativity Argument

    Lorne Falkenstein

    4. The Extension of Colour Sensations: Reid, Stewart, and Fearn

    Giovanni Grandi

    Part II: Moral theory

    5. Reid on the Moral Sense

    Rebecca Copenhaver

    6. Reid on the First Principles of Morals

    Terence Cuneo

    7. Reid’s Moral Psychology - Animal Motives as Guides to Virtue

    Esther Kroeker

    Part III: Epistemology

    8. Common Sense in Thomas Reid

    John Greco

    9. Thomas Reid on Truth, Evidence and First Principles

    Keith Lehrer

    10. Reid’s First Principle #7

    Patrick Rysiew

    11. Reason and Trust in Reid

    Nicholas Wolterstorff

    Part IV: Mind, Language, Metaphysics

    12. Reid on Powers of the Mind and the Person Behind the Curtain

    Laurent Jaffro

    13. Reid on the Priority of Natural Language

    John Turri

    14. Disagreement, Design, and Thomas Reid

    René van Woudenberg

    Biography

    Patrick Rysiew is Associate Professor of Philosophy at the University of Victoria. His primary research interest is in epistemology, including its points of intersection with certain issues in philosophy of language and psychology. He has published a number of articles on Reid.