Mundane reason: Difference between revisions

From FasciPedia
Jump to navigation Jump to search
(Created page with "'''Mundane Reason''' is a book about philosophy by Melvin Pollner. ==Meaning== The basic premise of the concept of '''mundane reason''' is that the standard assumptions about reality that people typically make as they go about day to day, including the very fact that they experience their reality as perfectly natural, are actually the result of social, cultural, and historical processes that make a particular perception of the world readily available. It is the...")
 
No edit summary
Line 1: Line 1:
{{Stub}}
'''Mundane Reason''' is a book about [[philosophy]] by Melvin Pollner.
'''Mundane Reason''' is a book about [[philosophy]] by Melvin Pollner.


Line 7: Line 8:
{{reflist}}
{{reflist}}


[[Category:Concepts in epistemology]]
[[Category:Concepts_in_epistemology]]
[[Category:Philosophy books]]
 
{{epistemology-stub}}
 
[[Category:Media]]
[[Category:Media]]
[[Category:Philosophy]]
[[Category:Philosophy]]
[[Category:Philosophy_books]]

Revision as of 08:59, 19 March 2023

Mundane Reason is a book about philosophy by Melvin Pollner.

Meaning

The basic premise of the concept of mundane reason is that the standard assumptions about reality that people typically make as they go about day to day, including the very fact that they experience their reality as perfectly natural, are actually the result of social, cultural, and historical processes that make a particular perception of the world readily available. It is the reasoning about the world, self, and others which presupposes the world and its relationship to the observer; according to Steven Shapin (Shapin 1994:31), it is a set of presuppositions about the subject, the object, and the nature of their relations.[1]

References

  1. Shapin, S. 1994, A Social History of Truth: Civility and Science in Seventeenth-Century England, University of Chicago Press, Chicago.