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Rebecca Gurney-Read

Nottingham University
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  • Nottingham University
    Department of Philosophy
    Undergraduate
  • All publications (3)
  •  54
    The Heart of What Matters: The Role for Literature in Moral Philosophy
    Mind 112 (447): 506-509. 2003.
    Literature and Ethics
  •  79
    On Philosophy's (lack of) Progress: From Plato to Wittgenstein
    Philosophy 85 (3): 341-367. 2010.
    I argue that the type of progress exhibited by philosophy is not that exhibited by science, but rather is akin to the kind of progress exhibited be someone becoming ‘older and wiser’. However, as actually-existing philosophy has gotten older, it has not always gotten wiser. As an illustration, I consider Rawls's conception of justification. I argue that Rawls's notion of what it is to have a philosophical justification exhibits no progress at all from Euthyphro's. In fact, drawing on a remark of…Read more
    I argue that the type of progress exhibited by philosophy is not that exhibited by science, but rather is akin to the kind of progress exhibited be someone becoming ‘older and wiser’. However, as actually-existing philosophy has gotten older, it has not always gotten wiser. As an illustration, I consider Rawls's conception of justification. I argue that Rawls's notion of what it is to have a philosophical justification exhibits no progress at all from Euthyphro's. In fact, drawing on a remark of Wittgenstein's, I suggest that Rawls's conception is inferior to the situation as depicted in Plato's famous dialogue – because at least in the case of Plato's Euthyphro, there is no illusion of justification.
    John RawlsLudwig WittgensteinPlato: EuthyphroPlato and Other PhilosophersPlato: Epistemology, Misc
  •  20
    The Wounded Animal: J. M. Coetzee and the Difficulty of Reality in Literature and Philosophy, by Stephen Mulhall
    Mind 120 (478): 552-557. 2011.
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