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Richard Rorty, American Philosopher, 75

By GARY SHAPIRO, Staff Reporter of the Sun | June 11, 2007

Pragmatist philosopher Richard Rorty died on Friday, according to a report by Stanford University. He was 75 years of age and succumbed to complications relating to pancreatic cancer.

Born in New York City, Rorty studied at the University of Chicago where he earned his bachelors in 1949 and at Yale University, where he earned a PhD in 1956.

After serving in the Army, he taught at Wellesley College before joining the faculty at Princeton in 1960. In 1982, he became a professor of humanities at the University of Virginia, before leaving for Stanford University where he was a member of the comparative literature department.

Although his early work such as "The Linguistic Turn" (1967) was influenced by analytic philosophy, Rorty went on to embrace pragmatism in the tradition of John Dewey and William James. Those on the right charged him with moral relativism, while meanwhile he defended a pragmatic American liberalism from its European poststructuralist critics.

Among his most widely known books were "Philosophy and the Mirror of Nature" (1979 and "Contingency, Irony, and Solidarity" (1989).

In his later years, he predicted the rise of a "literary culture," whereby novels and poetry would supersede as a source for ethics philosophical and religious texts, which for him held no privileged, higher claim to truth.

"He was a courageous thinker who contributed greatly to our public culture and it is a tremendous loss," said a professor of law and ethics at the University of Chicago, Martha Nussbaum.


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Richard Rorty - great friend and a special Philosopher. I was a comet. In Brazil we will keep his ideas. Paulo... [MORE]

Paulo Ghiraldelli Jr 

Jun 11, 2007 03:14

(1979) At the age of eight, my sitter- a young college student (Noreen) attending UC Santa Cruz, read to me... [MORE]

Lora Hunter 

Jun 11, 2007 19:57

Lora, your experience was similar to my experience with Rorty. A great smiled was the begining of our friendship. Paulo [MORE]

Paulo Ghiraldelli Jr 

Jun 11, 2007 22:12

Rorty was an inspiration to me. He brought me through the philosophical mists and liberated me from sterile analytic philosophy. [MORE]

Paul Gunning 

Jun 21, 2007 05:30