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A History of Reasonableness:
Testimony and Authority in the Art of Thinking
Rick Kennedy

This book describes a lost tradition that can be called reasonableness. The tradition began with Aristotle, was recommended to Western education by Augustine, flourished in the schools of the Renaissance through the nineteenth century, then got lost in the academic and philosophic shuffles of the twentieth century. Representative of the tradition is John Locke's story of a King of Siam who rejected reports of the existence of ice. The King would have had to risk too much trust in another man whom he did not know too well-a Dutch ambassador-in order to believe that elephants could walk on cold water. John Locke presented the story to encourage his readers to think about the responsibilities and risks entailed in what he called 'the gentle and fair ways of information.'
The art of thinking is largely social. Popular textbook writers such as Quintilian, Boethius, Philipp Melanchthon, John of St. Thomas, Antoine Arnauld, Thomas Reid, Isaac Watts, Richard Whately, William Hamilton, L. Susan Stebbings, and Max Black taught strategies of belief, trust, assent, and even submission as part of reasonableness. For over two thousand years testimony and authority were at the center of lively discussions about teaching the art of thinking. In the twentieth century the tradition faltered largely due to Immanuel Kant's insistence that there should be no distinction between handling testimony and personal experience. This book recounts the history of a lively educational tradition and hopes to encourage its revival.
Rick Kennedy, whose previous books and articles have been about Colonial American logic, mathematics, and science, is professor of history at Point Loma Nazarene University

 

DETAILS

288 pages
Size: 9 x 6 in
13 digit ISBN: 9781580461528
Binding: Hardback
First published: 26/Aug/2004
Last printed: 26/Aug/2004
Price: 75.00 USD / 40.00 GBP
Imprint: University of Rochester Press
Series: Rochester Studies in Philosophy
Subject: Philosophy

BIC class: AVH

STATUS: Available
Details updated on 18/11/2008

Contents
1   The Classical Tradition of Testimony in Topics
2   Three Medieval Traditions: Augustine, Boethius, and Cassiodoras
3   Two Renaissance Traditions: Ciceronian and Augustinian
4   The Long Influence of The Port-Royal Logic
5   Appreciating Aristotle: Thomists, Scots, and Oxford Noetics
6   Testimony Experience: The Rise of Critical Thinking

Reviews
Kennedy takes on the task of accounting for and justifying the use of testimony and authority through a detailed exposition of the history of their use in curricula, texts, and other accounts from the early Greeks to the present. His approach is thorough, and his text is supplemented with detailed figures, charts, and chapter notes. CHOICE



 

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