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  1. Philosophy and the Mirror of Nature is a 1979 book by the American philosopher Richard Rorty, in which the author attempts to dissolve modern philosophical problems instead of solving them. Rorty does this by presenting them as pseudo-problems that only exist in the language-game of epistemological projects culminating in analytic ...

    • Richard Rorty
    • 401
    • 1979
    • 1979
  2. 30 de set. de 2010 · 1979. Topics. Philosophy, Philosophy, Modern, Mind and body, Representation (Philosophy), Analysis (Philosophy), Civilization, Filosofia, Connaissance, Théorie de la, Représentation (Philosophie), Philosophie analytique, Langage et langues, Herméneutique. Publisher. Princeton : Princeton University Press. Collection.

  3. 31 de out. de 2017 · Overview. Author (s) Praise. When it first appeared in 1979, Philosophy and the Mirror of Nature hit the philosophical world like a bombshell. In it, Richard Rorty argued that, beginning in the seventeenth century, philosophers developed an unhealthy obsession with the notion of representation: comparing the mind to a mirror that reflects reality.

  4. Philosophy and the Mirror of Nature. Richard Rorty. Princeton University Press, 2009 - History - 439 pages. When it first appeared in 1979, Philosophy and the Mirror of...

  5. Philosophy and the Mirror of Nature is a remarkable work, in which Rorty combines the historical and the analytic approaches to philosophy in order to give a theory of its nature and a description of it as a discipline. Thus, the book is doubly interesting.

  6. 16 de out. de 2020 · Abstract. Rorty’s Philosophy and the Mirror of Nature presents the most thorough and sustained critique of Western epistemology and foundationalism in the second half of the twentieth Century. The work deconstructs philosophy as an autonomous discipline generating a “neutral matrix” to assess knowledge, truth, and rationality ...

  7. 29 de dez. de 2008 · When it first appeared in 1979, Philosophy and the Mirror of Nature hit the philosophical world like a bombshell. In it, Richard Rorty argued that, beginning in the seventeenth century, philosophers developed an unhealthy obsession with the notion of representation: comparing the mind to a mirror that reflects reality. Rorty's book is a powerful critique of this imagery and the tradition of ...