Frisina, Warren G. The Unity of Knowledge and Action: Toward a Nonrepresentational Theory of Knowledge. Albany: State University of New York Press, 2002.
Abstract
Building upon insights from the sixteenth
century Neo-Confucian Wang Yang-ming, the American pragmatist John
Dewey, and the process philosopher Alred North Whitehead, this book
argues that knowlege is best understood as a form of action. Many of
the most puzzling philosophic problems in the modern era can be traced
to our tendency to assume that knowledge is separate from action.
Letting go of the sharp knowledge-action distinction, however, makes
possible a more coherent theory of knowledge that is more adaptive to
the way we experience one another, the world, and ourselves. By
responding directly to problems raised by contemporary thinkers like
Charles Taylor, Donald Davidson, Richard Rorty, Daniel Dennett, Mark
Johnson, George Lakoff, and Robert Neville, this book maps out a
strategy for making progress in the contemporary quest for a
"nonrepresentational theory of knowledge."