Starmaking: Realism, Anti-realism, and Irrealism

Front Cover
Peter J. McCormick
MIT Press, 1996 - Philosophy - 218 pages

Starmaking brings together a cluster of work published over the past 35 years by Nelson Goodman and two Harvard colleagues, Hilary Putnam and Israel Scheffler, on the conceptual connections between monism and pluralism, absolutism and relativism, and idealism and different notions of realism -- issues that are central to metaphysics and epistemology.

The title alludes to Goodman's famous defense of the claim that because all true representations of stars and other objects are human creations, it follows that in an important sense the stars themselves are made by us. More generally, the argument moves from the fact that our right representations are constructed by us to the claim that the world itself is similarly constructed.

Starmaking addresses the question of whether this seeming paradox can be turned into a serious philosophical view. Goodman and Putnam are sympathetic; Scheffler is the critic.

Although many others continue to write about pluralism, relativism, and constructionalism, Starmaking brings together the protagonists in the debate since its beginnings and follows closely its still developing form and substance, focusing sharply on Goodman's claim that "we make versions, and right versions make worlds."

 

Contents

The Way the World Is
3
Epistemology of Objectivity
29
Words Works Worlds
61
On Rightness of Rendering
79
Reflections on Goodmans Ways of Worldmaking
107
Comments on Goodmans Ways of Worldmaking
125
The Wonderful Worlds of Goodman
133
Notes on the WellMade World
151
On Some Worldly Worries
165
Irrealism and Deconstruction
179
Comments
203
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