Discernment behind Asylum Walls; Or, The Limits of Efficacious Reasoning

In Jacoby Adeshei Carter & Darryl Scriven, Insurrectionist Ethics. Radical Perspectives on Social Justice. Palgrave. pp. 237-251 (2023)
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Abstract

This chapter offers a discussion of Leonard Harris’ insurrectionist philosophy, paying special attention to those places where Harris attenuates the capability and scope of human reasoning. The chapter critically engages: claims to divine reasoning, conceptual approaches to racism that rely upon totalizing accounts, the prominent conception of modernity, the notion that human apperception is unaffected by the episteme (i.e., intervening background assumptions that pervade the present epoch), and the notion that Harris’ philosophy precludes us from establishing moral imperatives and value ultimates. The author argues that one must take into account the cognitive and rational limitations—the corporeality and fallibilism—of human beings to understand Harris’ proffered conception of efficacious reasoning in moral contexts. Only then will we understand the ongoing creation and transvaluation of our norms and values, and what we could be outside the Asylum walls.

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Lee A. McBride III
College of Wooster

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