A companion to public philosophy
Otros Autores: | , , |
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Formato: | Libro electrónico |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
Hoboken, New Jersey :
Wiley-Blackwell
[2022]
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Colección: | Blackwell Companions to Philosophy
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Materias: | |
Ver en Biblioteca Universitat Ramon Llull: | https://discovery.url.edu/permalink/34CSUC_URL/1im36ta/alma991009724226006719 |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- Cover
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Contents
- Notes on Contributors
- Foreword
- Part I Public Philosophy and Its Problems
- Chapter 1 What Is Public Philosophy?
- Notes
- Chapter 2 The Professionalization of Philosophy: From Athens to the APA and Beyond
- 1 From Socrates to Kant: Pre-professional Public Philosophy
- 2 The Discipline and the Professionalization of Philosophy
- 3 The Rise of Public Philosophy within and against the Disciplinary Matrix
- References
- Chapter 3 Rekindling Public Philosophy
- Chapter 4 The Case Against Public Philosophy
- 1 The Case Against Academic Philosophy
- 2 Amateur Philosophy as a Good in Itself
- 3 The Problem of Expertise
- 4 Public Philosophy as Professional Philosophy
- 5 Conclusion
- Notes
- References
- Chapter 5 The Value of Public Philosophy
- 1 Why Public Philosophy?
- 2 The Value of Public Philosophy to the Public
- 2.1 Classification
- 2.2 Criticism
- 2.3 Translation
- 2.4 Expansion
- 2.5 Reflection
- 2.6 Normativity
- 3 The Value of Public Philosophy to Philosophers
- 4 The Value of Public Philosophy to Universities
- Acknowledgments
- Notes
- References
- Part II Locations and Impacts
- Chapter 6 Feminist Bioethics as Public Practice1
- 1 The Emergence of Feminist Bioethics
- 2 Relational Autonomy
- 3 Standpoint Theory
- 4 Intersectionality
- 5 The Black Mamas Matter Alliance
- 6 Concluding Thoughts
- Notes
- References
- Chapter 7 Disability, Bioethics, and the Duty to Do Public Philosophy During a Global Pandemic
- 1 Introduction
- 2 Disability, Illness, and Systemic Discrimination in Triage Protocols
- 3 Ethical Reasons
- 4 Epistemic Reasons
- 5 Prudential Reasons
- 6 Conclusion
- Notes
- References
- Chapter 8 Philosophy in Public Life in the Latin American and Latinx Traditions: Mexico and Argentina
- 1 Introduction.
- 2 Public Philosophy in Mexico
- 3 Public Philosophy in Argentina
- Conclusion
- Notes
- References
- Chapter 9 Africana Public Philosophy and Its Critique of Anti-Black Propaganda
- 1 Anti-Black Propaganda in Slavery and the Historical Antecedents of Africana Public Philosophy
- 2 Contemporary Violence and the Public's Reaction to Africana Public Philosophy
- References
- Chapter 10 Earth - A Place for Indigenous Solutions1
- It Is Time to Enact Indigenous Solutions
- 1. Hit'é: We Speak from a Place of Powerful Spirit
- 2. Nowe: Power Plus Place Equals Personality
- 3. NoKa: The Miseducative Nature vs. Culture Dichotomy
- 4. Tala: A Reconstruction of the Old Ways
- 5. Tc'wahe: We Live Among Relatives, Not Resources
- 6. Ichu: Promoting Systems of Life-Enhancement
- 7. Laxdju: Beauty Resides in the Difficult Work of Difference
- Ôk'ajU TahA Ôk'âfâTA: (Together We Can Move It Forward!)
- Notes
- References
- Chapter 11 Public Reasoning About the Good Life
- 1 What Is the Good Life?
- 2 Happiness: The Empirical Evidence
- 3 The Challenges of Public Philosophizing About the Good Life
- 4 Different Approaches to Public Philosophizing About the Good Life
- References
- Chapter 12 Public Philosophy, Sustainability, and Environmental Problems
- 1 Environmental Ethicists' Crisis of Conscience
- 2 Wellsprings of Public Environmental Philosophy
- 2.1 Environmental Problems as Wicked Problems
- 2.2 Philosophical Problems in the Field
- 2.3 Environmental Problems in an Unjust World
- 3 The Watershed of Public Environmental Philosophy
- Note
- References
- Chapter 13 Philosophy of Protest and Epistemic Activism
- 1 Protest, Silencing, and Epistemic Injustice Against Social Groups
- 1.1 Protest as a Complex Communicative Act and the Silencing of Protest
- 1.2 Three Kinds of Collective Epistemic Injustice.
- 2 Epistemic Activism
- Notes
- References
- Chapter 14 Public Philosophy and Deliberative Practices
- Introduction
- 1 The Co-emergence of Philosophy and Politics
- 2 Definitions of Deliberation
- 3 Models and Goals of Deliberative Practice
- 3.1 Deliberation as Critical Thinking
- 3.2 Epistemic Conceptions of Deliberation
- 3.3 Preference-based Models
- 3.4 The Discourse-Theoretical Model of Deliberation
- 3.5 Decentered Participatory Models of Deliberation
- 4 From Public Will to Public Policy
- 5 Concluding Thoughts
- References
- Chapter 15 Peace Literacy, Public Philosophy, and Peace Activism
- 1 Introduction
- 2 Peace Literacy
- 3 The Interdependence of Peace Activism and Public Philosophy
- 3.1 Anti-Slavery
- 3.2 Anti-war Activism
- 3.3 Civil Rights
- 3.4 Rising Liberatory Movements
- 4 Conclusion
- Notes
- References
- Chapter 16 Public Philosophy and Fat Activism
- 1 Introduction
- 2 Mainstream Philosophical Work
- 3 Master Narratives and Counterstories
- 4 Counter-Storytelling and Fat Activism
- 5 Conclusion
- Notes
- References
- Chapter 17 Public Philosophy in Effective Altruism
- 1 Effective Altruism and Its Intellectual Roots
- 2 Public Philosophy, Outreach and Engagement, and the Growth of Effective Altruism
- 3 Effective Altruism in Public Philosophical Debate
- 4 Conclusion
- References
- Chapter 18 Public Philosophy and Food: Foodies, Ethics, and Activism
- 1 Introduction
- 2 Philosophy's Bland History with Food
- 3 Emerging "Foodies" and "Foodie-ism"
- 4 The Politicization of Foodie Culture
- 5 Philosophy and Animal Consumption
- 6 A Shared Meal between Animal Rights' Decolonial, Anti-Racist, and Feminist Movements
- 7 Factory Farming and Sustainability
- 8 The Future of Food
- Notes
- References
- Chapter 19 Public Philosophy and Trans Activism.
- 1 "Activism" as Public Philosophy
- 2 Hot Takes as "Public Philosophy"
- 3 Dangers of the "Trans Activism" vs. "Public Philosophy" Dichotomy
- 4 Conclusion
- Notes
- References
- Part III Modalities
- Chapter 20 Popular Ethics in The Good Place and Beyond
- Notes
- References
- Chapter 21 Welcome to Voice Land: Public Philosophy on the Radio
- Why Public Philosophy?
- Why the Radio?
- Navigating Voice Land
- A Sampling of Contemporary Philosophy on the Radio
- New Frontiers on the New Frontier
- The State of Voice Land
- Notes
- References
- Chapter 22 Public Philosophy Through Film
- Scene 1: Detecting Semblances in Nolan's Memento
- Scene 2: Avowed and Disavowed Beliefs in Behind the Curve, American History X, and American Psycho
- Scene 3: Learning to Die So That One Can Live: Fight Club, The Ruins, and Malcolm X
- Conclusion: A Cinematic Public Philosophy to Come
- Notes
- References
- Chapter 23 Say What? Talking Philosophy with the Public
- 1 Getting Started
- 2 Writing Up Your Talk
- 3 Delivering Your Talk
- 4 Q &
- A
- 5 The Exit
- 6 Concluding Thoughts
- Notes
- Chapter 24 Public Philosophy and Popular Culture
- 1 How and Why It Started
- 2 Different Approaches
- 3 Part of the Problem
- 4 Money
- 5 Getting Involved
- 6 Does It Count?
- 7 A Conclusion about the Future
- Notes
- References
- Chapter 25 Public Philosophy Through Narrative
- 1 Storytelling and the Problem of Vagueness
- 2 The Design of Nonfiction
- 3 The Enlightenment of Alison Gopnik
- 4 Truth, Justification, and Narrative Storytelling
- Notes
- References
- Chapter 26 Philosophy Podcasting
- 1 A Variety of Formats
- 2 Philosophy as Spoken Word
- 3 Diversity
- 4 Podcasting and Professional Philosophy
- Notes
- Chapter 27 Philosophical Spaces1
- 1 Introduction
- 2 Clarifications
- 3 Facilitating Philosophy.
- 3.1 Domain-General Cognitive Facilitation
- 3.2 Domain-Specific Cognitive Facilitation
- 3.3 Affective Facilitation
- 3.4 Relational Facilitation
- 4 Opportunities
- 4.1 Participation
- 4.2 Scale
- 4.3 Interstitiality
- 4.4 The Discursive Norms of Philosophy
- 5 Challenges
- 5.1 The Problem of Rapport
- 5.2 The Problem of Urban Social Psychology
- 5.3 The Problem of the Outsider
- 6 Conclusion
- Notes
- References
- Chapter 28 Philosophy in Nature as a Kind of Public Philosophy
- 1 Introduction
- 2 My Path to Public Philosophy in Nature
- 3 The Tour
- 3.1 Setting the Scene
- 3.2 Dialogue
- 4 Challenges and Rewards
- 5 Conclusion
- Notes
- Chapter 29 Philosophical Counseling
- 1 Philosophical Counseling as a Mode of Philosophical Practice
- 2 What Philosophical Counselors Do
- 3 The Relationship between Philosophical Counseling and Psychotherapy
- 4 Guidance to Aspiring Philosophical Counselors
- Notes
- References
- Chapter 30 The Transformative Power of Community Engaged Teaching
- 1 Domains and Dynamics
- 2 Remembering and Understanding
- 3 Lessons and Legacies
- Notes
- References
- Chapter 31 Philosophy Through Memes
- 1 Philosophy. Through. Memes.
- 2 Bricolage
- 3 Ownership
- 4 Conclusion
- Notes
- References
- Part IV Collaborators
- Chapter 32 Philosophy for Children
- 1 History of Philosophy for Children
- 2 Methods for Doing Philosophy for Children
- 3 Philosophical Sensitivity and the Purposes of Philosophy for Children
- 4 Recognition by the Academy and by Schools
- 5 Epistemic Injustice and the Philosophical Recognition of Young People
- 6 Social Inequalities and Reaching All Young People
- 7 Philosophy of Childhood
- 8 Conclusion
- References
- Chapter 33 Public Philosophy in Prisons
- 1 Introduction
- 2 Epistemic Injustice and Critical Pedagogy.
- 3 The Narratization of the Oppressed.