Oxford University Press's
Academic Insights for the Thinking World

  • Author: Ralph Wedgwood

What is the value of rationality, and why does it matter?

In the past, most philosophers assumed that the central notion of rationality is a normative or evaluative concept: to think rationally is to think properly or well—in other words, to think as one should think. Rational thinking is in a sense good thinking, while irrational thinking is bad. Recently, however, philosophers have raised several objections to that assumption.

Read More