2008
DOI: 10.1111/j.1469-5812.2007.00377.x
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Philosophical Writing: Prefacing as professing

Abstract: If you do not wish to construe philosophical discourse as simply a discourse of cognition, a theoretical discourse; if you think it is also a practical, ethical discourse: how should you write? How should you frame the ethos, the authority of your discourse? This article re-presents an extended preface I wrote and rewrote obsessively over a period of nearly two years in an effort to forge a voice and mode of address adequate to my sense of philosophical discourse as a practical discourse, whilst also being acc… Show more

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Cited by 2 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…For McCormack, the quintessential example of prefacing is Cavell's extended sentence/preface to The Claim of Reason, which jars readers into a recognition that what they are about to read will not be business as usual. 35 In more traditional texts, or perhaps texts written for the general public and not academic philosophers, the preface is often a space to invite the reader in and gently instruct her on the best way to approach the text that follows. For Barber, each preface is signed with a place and date, as if indicating to the reader that he too is a part of the world he is describing.…”
Section: Barber's Argument For Strong Democracymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For McCormack, the quintessential example of prefacing is Cavell's extended sentence/preface to The Claim of Reason, which jars readers into a recognition that what they are about to read will not be business as usual. 35 In more traditional texts, or perhaps texts written for the general public and not academic philosophers, the preface is often a space to invite the reader in and gently instruct her on the best way to approach the text that follows. For Barber, each preface is signed with a place and date, as if indicating to the reader that he too is a part of the world he is describing.…”
Section: Barber's Argument For Strong Democracymentioning
confidence: 99%