3rd Edition

The Revolt Against Dualism An Inquiry Concerning the Existence of Ideas

By Arthur O. Lovejoy Copyright 1996
    452 Pages
    by Routledge

    452 Pages
    by Routledge

    The Revolt Against Dualism, first published in 1930, belongs to a tradition in philosophical theorizing that Arthur O. Lovejoy called "descriptive epistemology." Lovejoy's principal aim in this book is to clarify the distinction between the quite separate phenomena of the knower and the known, something regularly obvious to common sense, if not always to intellectual understanding. This work is as much an argument about the ineluctable differences between subject and object and between mentality and reality, as it is a subtle polemic against those who would stray far from acknowledging these differences. With a resolve that lasts over three hundred pages, Lovejoy offers candid evaluations of a generation's worth of philosophical discussions that address the problem of epistemological dualism.

    In his stunning new introduction, Jonathan B. Imber offers a reassessment of Lovejoy's career as a thinker and as an active participant in the worldly affairs of academic life. He introduces to a new generation of readers some enduring principles of the vocation of the scholar to which Lovejoy not only subscribed but to which he also gave substance through his activities as an academic man. The opening statement provides both a fit tribute to a great pioneer in the history of ideas, and an example of intellectual history in its own right. The Revolt Against Dualism will be a significant addition to the libraries of philosophers, sociologists, and history of ideas scholars.

    I: Cartesian Dualism and Natural Dualism; II: The First Phase of the Revolt and Its Outcome; III: The Second Phase: Objective Relativism; IV: The Outcome of the Second Phase; V: Mr. Whitehead and the Denial of Simple Location; VI: Mr. Bertrand Russell and the Unification of Mind and Matter: I; VII: Mr. Bertrand Russell and the Unification of Mind and Matter: II; VIII: Dualism and the Physical World; IX: The Nature of Knowing as a Natural Event

    Biography

    Arthur Lovejoy