Ethics and Insurrection: A Pragmatism for the Oppressed

Author:   Lee A. McBride III (Associate Professor of Philosophy, College of Wooster, USA)
Publisher:   Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
ISBN:  

9781350102279


Pages:   144
Publication Date:   28 January 2021
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
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Ethics and Insurrection: A Pragmatism for the Oppressed


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Author:   Lee A. McBride III (Associate Professor of Philosophy, College of Wooster, USA)
Publisher:   Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Imprint:   Bloomsbury Academic
Weight:   0.381kg
ISBN:  

9781350102279


ISBN 10:   135010227
Pages:   144
Publication Date:   28 January 2021
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Tertiary & Higher Education
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgements Source Acknowledgements and Abbreviations Introduction 1. (Moral) Philosophy in a Thoroughly Disenchanted Universe 2. An Insurrectionist Ethics: Critical Pragmatism and Philosophia Nata Ex Conatu 3. New Descriptions, New Possibilities 4. Empathy or Insurrection: Wielding Positive and Negative Affect 5. Evoking Race (to Confront Race-Based Oppression); Or, Adversarial Groups as Anabsolute 6. Building Traditions, Shaping Futures: Values, Norms, and Transvaluation Epilogue Index

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In Ethics and Insurrection, Lee McBride III brings together Deweyan pragmatic ethical naturalism and insurrectionist ethics. The result is a demystification of philosophy on behalf of those whose voices are ignored by standard philosophical discourse and a proposal to replace that discourse with a pragmatism for the oppressed. * Dwayne A. Tunstall, Associate Professor of Philosophy, Grand Valley State University, USA *


In Ethics and Insurrection, Lee McBride III brings together Deweyan pragmatic ethical naturalism and insurrectionist ethics. The result is a demystification of philosophy on behalf of those whose voices are ignored by standard philosophical discourse and a proposal to replace that discourse with a pragmatism for the oppressed. * Dwayne A. Tunstall, Associate Professor of Philosophy, Grand Valley State University, USA * Philosophical pragmatism today sometimes runs the risk of being bogged down in endless academic debates. To paraphrase James, we are now at a stage where it is no longer attacked as absurd, somewhat admitted to being true and obvious, and safely confined to the territories of exegesis and -isms warring with other -isms (as well as -icisms, of course). McBride's book is an attempt to break free from such constraints, carrying no other flag than that of the pragmatist who still believes in social progress and philosophy's role in working towards it. He offers a spirited defence of ethical naturalism that eschews materialist and scientistic dead-ends which will hopefully be taken up by a like-minded community of inquirers, academic and otherwise. * Mara-Daria Cojocaru, Lecturer in Practical Philosophy, Munich School of Philosophy, Germany * A provocative, creative and challenging account of ethical naturalism that makes us see why an ethos of insurrection is vital to any democracy and struggle for human liberation. Stepping over the dead-pan world of professional moral philosophy, McBride provides an optimism in the face of cruel choices. If there is a form of pragmatism that can provide motivation - the transvaluation of values - to struggle against forced prostitution, child servitude and racist exploitation, McBride purports provide its depiction. It takes the ethics of insurrection and shows its universality. With the ethos of the ethics of insurrection and democratic sensibilities, McBride fashions a walkway of arguments and pictures. McBride carves a space between critical pragmatist experimentalism and an insurrectionist ethics - the space is where we want our choices not to harm anyone as we test different ethical choices and where nothing allows for our choices to be anything but harmless. * Leonard Harris, Professor of Philosophy, Purdue University, USA *


Author Information

Lee A. McBride III is Professor of Philosophy at the College of Wooster, USA. He is the editor of A Philosophy of Struggle: The Leonard Harris Reader (Bloomsbury, 2020).

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