In this remarkable book, Joseph Margolis, one of America's leading and most celebrated philosophers, examines the relationship between two apparently contradictory philosophical tendencies - realism and relativism. In order to examine the relationship between the two, Margolis establishes a taxomony of different kinds of realism and different kinds of relativism. Drawing on both the analytic and Continental traditions, he examines (from a pragmatic point of view) the various relationships between these two tendencies in the light of two major developments in modern philosophy - the concern for praxis and the concern for historicity.
Twenty years after it was first published to great acclaim, Margolis has updatedPragmatism Without Foundationsin the light of his most recent work and the development of pragmatism in the intellectual world. This second edition includes an updated preface and a brand new epilogue addressing these developments and their implications for his earlier work.
PrefaceAcknowledgementsPrologue: A sense of the issueIntroductionPart One: The Defense and Application of Relativism1. The nature and strategies of relativism2. Historicism and universalism3. Objectivism and relativism4. Rationality and realism5. Realism and relativismPart Two: Foundations and the recovery of pragmatism6. The legitimation of realism7. Pragmatism without foundations8. A sense of rapprochement between Analytic and Continental European philosophy9. Cognitive issues in the realist-idealist dispute10. Skepticism, foundationalism, and pragmatism11. Scientific realism as a transcendental issueEpilogueIndex