Skip to main content

What Philosophy Is For

What is the state of philosophy today, and what might it be tomorrow? With What Philosophy Is For, Michael Hampe answers these questions by exploring the relationships among philosophy, education, science, and narrative, developing a Socratic critique of philosophical doctrines.

Philosophers generally develop systematic theories that lay out the basic structures of human experience, in order to teach the rest of humanity how to rightly understand our place in the world. This “scientific” approach to philosophy, Hampe argues, is too one-sided. In this magnum opus of an essay, Hampe aims to rescue philosophy from its current narrow claims of doctrine and to remind us what it is really for—to productively disillusion us into clearer thinking. Hampe takes us through twenty-five hundred years of intellectual history, starting with Socrates. That archetype of the philosophical teacher did not develop strict doctrines and rules, but rather criticized and refuted doctrines. With the Socratic method, we see the power of narration at work. Narrative and analytical disillusionment, Hampe argues, are the most helpful long-term enterprises of thought, the ones most worth preserving and developing again.

What Philosophy Is For is simultaneously an introduction, a critique, and a call to action. Hampe shows how and why philosophy became what it is today, and, crucially, shows what it could be once more, if it would only turn its back on its pretensions to dogma: a privileged space for reflecting on the human condition.

352 pages | 6 x 9 | © 2018

Philosophy: Ethics, General Philosophy

Reviews

"Hampe offers a learned reflection on the forms philosophy has taken, providing guideposts for the future development of the field. In ways reminiscent of Hadot and Dewey, he reanimates the Socratic project of treating philosophy as an activity rather than simply a doctrine, arguing that philosophy needs a renewed commitment to non-doctrinal, agnostic thinking for an era where technoscience is creating new forms of life." 
 

Robert Frodeman, University of North Texas

Table of Contents

Preface to the American Edition
 
1          Asserting, Narrating, Educating
2          Maieutic and Academic Philosophy
3          Life, Subjectivity, Assimilation
4          The Life of Assertive Beings, Linguistic Dissidence
5          Ordinary Language, Theories, and Explanations
6          The Ordinary and Its Truth
7          Expertocracy and the Education of Individuals
8          Freedom, Necessity, Creativity
9          Reacting to the World
10        Telling Stories about Assertions and Arguments
11        Concreteness and Critique
12        Arriving at the End of Asserting
 
Epilogue to the History of Philosophy
Acknowledgments
Index

Be the first to know

Get the latest updates on new releases, special offers, and media highlights when you subscribe to our email lists!

Sign up here for updates about the Press