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Enlightened Common Sense
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Table of Contents

1. On the Presuppositions and Origins of the Philosophy of Critical Realism

2. Transcendental Realism and the Philosophy of Science

3. Critical Naturalism and the Philosophy of the Social/Human Sciences

4. Applied Critical Realism and Interdisciplinarity

5. Ethics and Language: Explanatory Critique and Critical Discourse Analysis

6. The Further Development of Critical Realism I: Dialectical Critical Realism

7. The Further Development of Critical Realism II: The Philosophy of metaReality

8. The Critique of the Philosophical Discourse of Modernity and the Western Philosophical Tradition

9. Critical Realism and the Ontology of the Good Society

About the Author

Centre for Critical Realism, London, UK

Reviews

Roy Bhaskar’s too-brief life was a gift to humanity. His life's work gave us a solid ontological grounding for all those intuitions that most of us feel we should be able to justify, but are constantly being told by the reigning intellectual authorities we can’t: that the world, and other people, are real, that freedom is inherent in the nature of the cosmos, that genuine human flourishing can never be at the expense of others. He lived to provide the intellectual heavy artillery for simple common decency and good sense. Much of his work was written in exceedingly difficult language. This book however, makes it accessible to those who have the most to gain from it: anyone trying to make the world a better place.David Graeber, Anthropologist; sometime revolutionary; Professor at London School of Economics, UK.Roy Bhaskar writes: ‘If there is a single big idea in critical realism it is the idea of ontology.’ One big idea, perhaps, but Bhaskar developed it in three very different and equally innovative ways. From early depth ontology, through rethinking dialectical negativity, to the metaphysics of metaReality, Bhaskar pushed his thought – and himself. Guided always by the lodestar of emancipation, this final work demonstrates the unity in the three phases of his thought. Always willing to go against the mainstream, it is a fitting final tribute to a great philosopher. Alan Norrie, Professor, University of Warwick, UK.

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