Ch.1. Introduction: Summary of the Argument.- Ch.2. Introduction: Toward a Conventionalist Framework.- Ch. 3. Re-defining “Definition”: An Argument for Conventionalism.- Ch. 4. Re-defining “Meaning”: Defending Semantic Internalism Over Externalism.- Ch. 5. Re-defining “Disagreement”: Rationality Without Final Solutions.- Ch. 6. Re-defining “Philosophical Analysis”: Not Descriptive Analysis, Or Conservatism, But Pragmatic Revisionism.- Ch. 7. Adequacy Conditions for a Prescriptive Theory of Racism: Toward an Oppression-Centered Account.- Ch. 8. Racial Oppression and Grammatical Pluralism: A Critique of Jorge Garcia on Racist belief.- Ch. 9. Concluding Note.
Alberto G. Urquidez is currently a CFD Postdoctoral Fellow in Philosophy at Bowdoin College, USA. .
“Urquidez carefully works through a massive body of literature and
thought, and offers a compelling critique of the overlapping
discursive spheres that will appeal to critics on various levels.”
(George N. Fourlas, Ethical Theory and Moral Practice, Vol. 24,
2021)
“(Re-) Defining Racism is a very smart and well-written book that I
think Alberto Urquidez should be extremely proud to have written.
The book covers an impressive amount of literature, both in
philosophy of language … and philosophy of race.” (José Jorge
Mendoza, Ethical Theory and Moral Practice, Vol. 24, 2021)
“Alberto G. Urquidez’s (Re-) Defining Racism, is a masterful work
in conceptual explication … . Urquidez has contributed a great deal
to the academic philosophical tradition of Philosophy of Race and
others will doubtless take up extensive discussion ofmany aspects
of this seminal work.” (Naomi Zack, Ethical Theory and Moral
Practice, Vol. 24, 2021)
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