Reality: The Philosophy of Realism

Articles by Daniel Wagner, Brian Kemple, Francisco Plaza, Brian Jones, Kirk Kanzelberger, Michael Dodds OP, Jim Capehart, and Matthew Minerd.

  • Editorial Introduction: Reality as Katharsis
  • The Logical Terms of Sense Realism: A Thomistic-Aristotelian & Phenomenological Defense | Philosophical Implications of Sense Realism
  • Signs and Reality | The Analogy of Res-ality
  • Reality and the Meaning of Evil | Made of Flame and Air
  • Political Science and Realism | Classical Realism in a Democratic Context

Description

This first issue of REALITY—The Philosophy of Realism—like most publications and especially those of a collaborative effort, signifies innumerable hours of effort. The goal of our journal is simple: to reinvigorate an intelligent discussion about realism as a philosophical approach. By a realist approach, we mean not simply as pertains to theories of knowledge, but rather a kind of thinking that perfuses itself throughout all philosophical inquiries: all questions of truth, of meaning and purpose, of good, of human action, the political, the physical and the metaphysical, of thought and thing, and anything else about which one might ask, “What does this mean?” To clarify this pursuit of reality, and expound on its importance, our first issue asks the question: what is realism? It is an important question, not simply for our purposes here, but for philosophy as a whole, and thus an important question for all human beings. Without maintenance of a sound answer—which must be sustained dialogically—philosophy wilts into one or another sophistical theory that begins by denying some aspect of the real; and a small error in the beginning becomes great in the end.

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