Richard Rorty (1931-2007)
Richard Rorty, the leading American philosopher and heir to the pragmatist tradition, passed away on Friday, June 8.
He was Professor of Comparative Literature emeritus at Stanford University. In April the American Philosophical Society awarded him the Thomas Jefferson Medal. The prize citation reads: “In recognition of his influential and distinctively American contribution to philosophy and, more widely, to humanistic studies. His work redefined knowledge ‘as a matter of conversation and of social practice, rather than as an attempt to mirror nature’ and thus redefined philosophy itself as an unending, democratically disciplined, social and cultural activity of inquiry, reflection, and exchange, rather than an activity governed and validated by the concept of objective, extramental truth.” (via)
Here is a bibliography of Rorty’s work (with some of his essays on line)
A profile on Rorty by Simon Blackburn; an essay by Jonathan Ree on Rorty.
Two reviews by Rorty in London Review of Books (here and here)
The “Introduction” (here) of Rorty’s Consequences of Pragmatism
Via the publisher, the pdf of the wonderful little book of interviews with Rorty entitled Against Bosses, Against Oligarchy.
Finally:





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