
Latin American Thought: Philosophical Problems And Arguments
by Nuccetelli,Susanna-
Free Shipping on All Orders!
*excludes Marketplace items.
Buy New
Buy Used
Rent Textbook
Rent Digital
How Marketplace Works:
- This item is offered by an independent seller and not shipped from our warehouse
- Item details like edition and cover design may differ from our description; see seller's comments before ordering.
- Sellers much confirm and ship within two business days; otherwise, the order will be cancelled and refunded.
- Marketplace purchases cannot be returned to eCampus.com. Contact the seller directly for inquiries; if no response within two days, contact customer service.
- Additional shipping costs apply to Marketplace purchases. Review shipping costs at checkout.
Summary
Author Biography
Table of Contents
Preface | p. xiii |
The Epistemic Practices of Latin American Indians: A Puzzle for Philosophers | p. 1 |
Why Should We Care About Native Cultures? | p. 2 |
Rational Prediction in the West | p. 3 |
Prediction Among the Mayans | p. 4 |
The Case of Mayan Astrology | p. 5 |
The Case of Mayan Prophecies | p. 8 |
What Sort of Rationality Is Mayan Rationality? | p. 9 |
An Argument for Strong Rationalism | p. 10 |
The Principle of Charity Versus Strong Rationalism | p. 12 |
A Further Objection to Strong Rationalism | p. 13 |
The Bridgehead View | p. 14 |
First Objection to the Bridgehead View | p. 16 |
Second Objection to the Bridgehead View | p. 17 |
Weak Rationality and Critial Thinking | p. 19 |
Discussion Questions | p. 20 |
Suggestions for Further Reading | p. 22 |
Notes | p. 22 |
Could the Mayans Think? And What About Us? | p. 25 |
The Weak Rationality Argument | p. 27 |
Human Rationality and Animal Rationality | p. 27 |
A Metaphorical Interpretation of Mayan Prediction | p. 29 |
"True for the Mayans," | p. 30 |
Is Rationality Relative? | p. 32 |
"True in the Context of Mayan Culture," | p. 33 |
Ordinary Thinkers Versus Super Thinkers | p. 35 |
Cognitive Pluralism | p. 38 |
Super Thinkers Versus Animal Thinkers | p. 38 |
Neither Super Thinkers nor Animal Thinkers | p. 40 |
Mayan Rationality Reconsidered | p. 42 |
Could the Natives of Latin America Think? | p. 43 |
Why the Mayans' Massive Error Does Not Amount to Irrationality | p. 45 |
Discussion Questions | p. 46 |
Suggestions for Further Reading | p. 48 |
Notes | p. 48 |
Native Folk Cosmologies Versus Western Philosophy and Science | p. 49 |
Understanding the Natural World: Latin America and the West | p. 50 |
Folk Cosmologies in Latin America | p. 51 |
Folk Cosmologies in the West | p. 53 |
Questions That Make Little Sense to Ask | p. 53 |
Are Folk Cosmologies Philosophy? | p. 55 |
Did Ancient Latin American Civilizations Have Any Philosophy? | p. 56 |
What Bernardino de Sahagun Saw in the Colonies | p. 57 |
Is Philosophy Universal? Latin Americans Follow the West | p. 58 |
Antonio Caso on the Philosophical Character | p. 59 |
Jose Vasconcelos' "Super-Criterion," | p. 61 |
Argumentation as a Demarcation Criterion | p. 62 |
The Ancestors of Philosophy in the West | p. 62 |
The Ancestors of Philosophy in Latin America | p. 63 |
Philosophy Today in Latin America and the West | p. 64 |
Discussion Questions | p. 66 |
Suggestions for Further Reading | p. 67 |
Notes | p. 67 |
The Legacy of 1492: Pluralism, Relativism, and the Clash of Cultures | p. 69 |
What Would Santayana Say About Magic Thought and Prayers? | p. 71 |
Could Magic Really Help in Understanding the Natural World? | p. 73 |
Relativism Revisited: The Linguistic Argument | p. 74 |
A Contribution from Cultural Anthropology | p. 76 |
Avoiding Ethnocentrism | p. 77 |
Getting Tough-Minded | p. 78 |
Pluralism Without Cultural Relativism | p. 79 |
Completing the Analogy | p. 81 |
Philosophy, Science, and World Cultures | p. 82 |
Francisco Romero: Not All Cultures Are Created Equal | p. 82 |
The "Species Chauvinism" Objection Against Romero | p. 83 |
Is There a Natural Selection of Cultures? | p. 85 |
Discussion Questions | p. 88 |
Suggestions for Further Reading | p. 90 |
Notes | p. 91 |
Thomistic Philosophy and the Conquest: Human Rights in the New World | p. 93 |
Human Rights: A Moral Dilemma | p. 94 |
Conflict of Cultures and of Religions, Too | p. 98 |
Was the Conquest Morally Justified? | p. 101 |
Were the Indians "Natural Slaves"? | p. 102 |
The Theory of Natural Slaves in Context | p. 107 |
Sepulveda Defeated by a Non-Scholastic Alternative | p. 108 |
Montaigne and the Relativist Alternative | p. 110 |
Las Casas's Scholastic Defense of the Rights of the Indians | p. 114 |
Lascasianism: A Philosophy or a Political Agenda? | p. 119 |
Vitoria: Humanism About International Law and Natural Rights | p. 123 |
Discussion Questions | p. 128 |
Suggestions for Further Reading | p. 131 |
Notes | p. 133 |
Iberian Scholasticism and Its Critics: From Colonial Rule to Independence | p. 137 |
The Scholastic Paradigm | p. 138 |
Jose de Acosta Versus Aristotelian Science | p. 143 |
Acosta's Concerns in Perspective | p. 147 |
Sor Juana: Could Women Think in Colonial Mexico? | p. 149 |
The Perils of a Certain Scholastic Dispute | p. 152 |
Was Sor Juana a Radical Feminist? | p. 155 |
Colonial Scholasticism in Context | p. 159 |
Simon Bolivar: Independence Leads to Puzzles | p. 160 |
Must Political Systems Accommodate Ethnic Diversity? | p. 165 |
Sarmiento's Dilemma: Whose Civilization Is Preferable to Barbarism? | p. 166 |
Is There a Connection Between Race and Character? Facundo's Ethnic Stereotypes | p. 168 |
Discussion Questions | p. 173 |
Suggestions for Further Reading | p. 175 |
Notes | p. 176 |
Latin Americans, North Americans, and the Rest of the World | p. 179 |
Autochthonous Positivists | p. 180 |
Positivism in Brazil | p. 183 |
Latin American Positivists and "First Philosophy," | p. 187 |
Positivism in Mexico | p. 189 |
Rodo on Hispanic Identity: A True Latin Americanist? | p. 193 |
Ariel Vindicated: The Latin American Critique of the United States | p. 197 |
Marti on Social Justice and the Americas | p. 201 |
Indians, Land, and Race | p. 204 |
The Actual Needs of the Oppressed | p. 208 |
The Oppressed Against Mariategui | p. 211 |
Discussion Questions | p. 212 |
Suggestions for Further Reading | p. 214 |
Notes | p. 216 |
Latin American Identity: Ethnicity, Name, and Thought | p. 223 |
The Collective Identity of Latin Americans: A Puzzle | p. 224 |
Describing Versus Evaluating Ethnic Groups | p. 227 |
A Latin American Race? | p. 228 |
Collective Identity: A Resolution | p. 231 |
Should Latin Americans Have No Name at All? | p. 232 |
Is There a Reason to Name Groups of People? | p. 235 |
"Hispanics" Versus "Latinos," | p. 236 |
A Characteristically Latin American Philosophy? Getting Critical | p. 240 |
Philosophy in Latin America Versus Latin American Philosophy | p. 243 |
How Is Latin American Philosophy Possible? | p. 246 |
Latin American Thought Versus Latin America Philosophy | p. 248 |
Discussion Questions | p. 253 |
Suggestions for Further Reading | p. 255 |
Notes | p. 256 |
Author Index | p. 261 |
Subject Index | p. 265 |
Table of Contents provided by Syndetics. All Rights Reserved. |
An electronic version of this book is available through VitalSource.
This book is viewable on PC, Mac, iPhone, iPad, iPod Touch, and most smartphones.
By purchasing, you will be able to view this book online, as well as download it, for the chosen number of days.
Digital License
You are licensing a digital product for a set duration. Durations are set forth in the product description, with "Lifetime" typically meaning five (5) years of online access and permanent download to a supported device. All licenses are non-transferable.
More details can be found here.
A downloadable version of this book is available through the eCampus Reader or compatible Adobe readers.
Applications are available on iOS, Android, PC, Mac, and Windows Mobile platforms.
Please view the compatibility matrix prior to purchase.