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The Knowing Animal: A Philosophical Inquiry into Knowledge and Truth
 
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The Knowing Animal: A Philosophical Inquiry into Knowledge and Truth [Paperback]

Raymond Tallis
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Product details

  • Paperback: 336 pages
  • Publisher: Edinburgh University Press (2 Nov 2004)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 0748619534
  • ISBN-13: 978-0748619535
  • Product Dimensions: 23.1 x 15.5 x 2.3 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 433,506 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
  • See Complete Table of Contents

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Raymond Tallis
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Review

Tallis conjures up a challenging and endlessly fascinating way of thinking about ourselves that should act as a signpost for the future where we might learn once again to glimpse, as our forebears did, the wonder - and mystery - of ourselves. -- James Le Fanu One of the most intriguing figures in the current intellectual scene. Raymond Tallis is a man unusual in modern medicine. His career has been devoted to caring for, studying, and advancing the health of older people in society. But while working as a Professor of Geriatric medicine at the University of Manchester, he has developed a parallel career - as a philosopher, critic, poet and novelist - largely unknown to his clinical brotherhood and sisterhood. Indeed, important though his medical work has been, it is likely that his philosophy, and especially his philosophical anthropology, will leave a particularly indelible mark on human affairs. -- Richard Horton

Times Higher Education Supplement

‘One of the most intriguing figures in the current intellectual scene.’ --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

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31 of 32 people found the following review helpful
fascinating... 13 July 2005
Format:Paperback
This is the third book in a trilogy starting with 'The Hand' and 'I Am', and the culmination of an argument running through nearly a thousand pages in total.

Perhaps the best way to approach the trilogy is by starting with two fundamental approaches to the study of Man. One is philosophy, which examines, say, self-consciousness, free will and personal identity without any reference to the historical facts of how mankind came to be the way it is, but as if Man had fallen out of the sky, so to speak. By contrast, the historical approach to Man is inescapably Darwinian, and often reductive: for all their brilliance, Matt Ridley and Steven Pinker are often crassly reductive in a way that makes philosophers uncomfortable, since they are trying to resolve philosophical problems with tools provided by science. It is not mere professional jealously that motivates the hostility of philosophers to evolutionary reductionists. It is the realisation that many fundamental aspects of Man simply cannot be accounted for scientifically.

Tallis sets himself the huge challenge of bringing the historical and philosophical approaches together. As an academic doctor, he is well placed to evaluate the claims of science about Man -- both their power and their limits --, and as a remarakle polymath, who has written brilliant and funny demolitions of the moronic reductivists in the field of literary theory, he has the philosophical sophisitication to make relevant distinctions.

"The Hand" is the least philosophical, and most historical, book, and may be skipped by those interested in the latter aspects of the argument. It is nonetheless a fascinating elaboration of the claim that it is the development of the hand as a tool for manipulating the external world that led to the distinctive self-awareness of Man. Tallis is aware that in explaining the escape of Man from animality, one must take take as a starting point an un-self-conscious animal. The leap to Man is a difference of kind, and not merely degree, according to Tallis, and this is where his philosophical acumen and refusal to compromise with scientism comes in handy.

The philosophical aspects of that self-awareness are developed in "I Am", which contains chapters on self-consciousness and personal identity that are hugely rigorous and original. Having read quite widely in the philosophical literature, I can recommend them to students as weighty contributions to those areas. The same goes for the middle chapters in "The Knowing Animal", which take the argument from illusion (sticks looking bent in water), which has been gathering dust in university libraries for decades, and reinvigorates it with new life. These chapters can only be described as inspired.

This is a demanding book, but all good philosophy books are. It is also clearly written with a very light touch, and much humour and insight. (Only the chapter on free will eluded my grasp, but that may well be my fault). Tallis is a champion of the general reader, as opposed to the academic orthodoxies, and he has given the general reader (as well as the specialist) a truly extraordinary book.

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10 of 13 people found the following review helpful
Far from The End 16 Mar 2008
By Mr. RB FORTUNE-WOOD VINE™ VOICE
Format:Paperback|Amazon Verified Purchase
`Somewhat dismayingly, I do not know whether the world would have been significantly poorer if I had died before writing Handkind' (p.308) says Raymond Tallis at the end of his philosophical anthropological trilogy. I do not know about the world, but I would certainly feel poorer without these three volumes. Each book has expanded on my understanding of a multiplicity of disciplines and philosophies as well as providing a more complete picture of what it is to be human. This is done not in the inaccessible style of many contemporary philosophers, but with an attention to clarity that is commendable.

Tallis begins with `The Hand' by looking at how humanity became different to all other animals (not just by degree but by kind) thanks to the evolutionarily developed hand. `I Am', the second book, explores many subjects grounded in first person being (the existential intuition that `I am a thing that exists') and agency. This last volume, `The Knowing Animal', explores what knowledge is and how propositional awareness (developed from the existential intuition and unique to human beings) encompasses both indexicalised and deindexicalised awareness; Tallis' also used the final book to further elucidate on matters improperly examined in the other two works, most pertinently agency.

`I feel now as if, far from reaching the end of my questions, half a million words into this investigation I am just at the beginning.' (p.309) If this is just the beginning I would be more than willing to read through another (and another and another, etc) half a million words of Tallis' philosophical investigations and still be nowhere near the end.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
fascinating 2 Dec 2010
By Bezdechi - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Paperback
This is the third book in a trilogy starting with 'The Hand' and 'I Am', and the culmination of an argument running through nearly a thousand pages in total.

Perhaps the best way to approach the trilogy is by starting with two fundamental approaches to the study of Man. One is philosophy, which examines, say, self-consciousness, free will and personal identity without any reference to the historical facts of how mankind came to be the way it is, but as if Man had fallen out of the sky, so to speak. By contrast, the historical approach to Man is inescapably Darwinian, and often reductive: for all their brilliance, Matt Ridley and Steven Pinker are often crassly reductive in a way that makes philosophers uncomfortable, since they are trying to resolve philosophical problems with tools provided by science. It is not mere professional jealously that motivates the hostility of philosophers to evolutionary reductionists. It is the realisation that many fundamental aspects of Man simply cannot be accounted for scientifically.

Tallis sets himself the huge challenge of bringing the historical and philosophical approaches together. As an academic doctor, he is well placed to evaluate the claims of science about Man -- both their power and their limits --, and as a remarakle polymath, who has written brilliant and funny demolitions of the moronic reductivists in the field of literary theory, he has the philosophical sophisitication to make relevant distinctions.

"The Hand" is the least philosophical, and most historical, book, and may be skipped by those interested in the former aspects of the argument. It is nonetheless a fascinating elaboration of the claim that it is the development of the hand as a tool for manipulating the external world that led to the distinctive self-awareness of Man. Tallis is aware that in explaining the escape of Man from animality, one must take take as a starting point an un-self-conscious animal. The leap to Man is a difference of kind, and not merely degree, according to Tallis, and this is where his philosophical acumen and refusal to compromise with scientism comes in handy.

The philosophical aspects of that self-awareness are developed in "I Am", which contains chapters on self-consciousness and personal identity that are hugely rigorous and original. Having read quite widely in the philosophical literature, I can recommend them to students as weighty contributions to those areas. The same goes for the middle chapters in "The Knowing Animal", which take the argument from illusion (sticks looking bent in water), which has been gathering dust in university libraries for decades, and reinvigorates it with new life. These chapters can only be described as inspired.

This is a demanding book, but all good philosophy books are. It is also clearly written with a very light touch, and much humour and insight. (Only the chapter on free will eluded my grasp, but that may well be my fault). Tallis is a champion of the general reader, as opposed to the academic orthodoxies, and he has given the general reader (as well as the specialist) a truly extraordinary book.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
How the Knower Knows 31 Mar 2010
By Mark - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Paperback|Amazon Verified Purchase
Tallis takes the most interesting results from both phenomenology and analytic philosophy and draws bold conclusions about how humans relate to the world. This is a work by a true philosopher, aimed at the big picture, rather than an academic specialist. Outstanding, but those without a background in philosophy will find it a challenging read.
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