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The Cranes Walk Plato Pluralism And The Inconstancy Of Truth 1st Edition Jeremy Barris

  • SKU: BELL-35014126
The Cranes Walk Plato Pluralism And The Inconstancy Of Truth 1st Edition Jeremy Barris
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The Cranes Walk Plato Pluralism And The Inconstancy Of Truth 1st Edition Jeremy Barris instant download after payment.

Publisher: Fordham University Press
File Extension: PDF
File size: 2.14 MB
Pages: 360
Author: Jeremy Barris
ISBN: 9780823229130, 0823229130
Language: English
Year: 2009
Edition: 1

Product desciption

The Cranes Walk Plato Pluralism And The Inconstancy Of Truth 1st Edition Jeremy Barris by Jeremy Barris 9780823229130, 0823229130 instant download after payment.

In The Crane's Walk, Jeremy Barris seeks to show that we can conceive and live with a pluralism of standpoints with conflicting standards for truth--with the truth of each being entirely unaffected by the truth of the others. He argues that Plato's work expresses this kind of pluralism, and that this pluralism is important in its own right, whether or not we agree about what Plato's standpoint is.
The longest tradition of Plato scholarship identifies crucial faults in Plato's theory of Ideas. Barris argues that Plato deliberately displayed those faults, because he wanted to demonstrate that basic kinds of error or illogic have dimensions that are crucial to the establishing of truth. These dimensions legitimate a paradoxical coordination of logically incompatible conceptions of truth. Connecting this idea with emerging currents of Plato scholarship, he emphasizes, in addition to the dialogues' arguments, the importance of their nonargumentative features, including drama, myths, fictions, anecdotes, and humor. These unanalyzed nonargumentative features function rigorously, as a lever with which to examine the enterprise of rational argument itself, without presupposing its standards or illegitimately assimilating any position to the standards of another.
Today, communities are torn apart by conflicts within and between a host of different pluralist and absolutist commitments. The possibility developed in this book-a coordination of absolute and relative truth that allows an understanding of some relativist and some absolutist positions as being fully legitimate and as capable of existing in a relation to their opposites-may contribute to perspectives for resolving these conflicts.

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