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CONTENTS

Оглавление

Acknowledgements

Note on the Quotation of Sources in Spanish

List of Diagrams

Introduction

PART I: DIVERSITY AND THE CHALLENGES TO DIALOGUE
1.The Argumentative Dimension of Intercultural Dialogue
1.1.Introduction
1.2.The Context for Dialogue
1.2.1.Between Inculturation and Dialogue: The Challenges of the Latin American Catholic Church
1.2.1.1.The Commitment of the Church with Indigenous Peoples
1.2.1.2.The Gospel and the Cultures
1.2.2.The Struggles for Recognition of Indigenous Peoples and the Emergence of Multicultural Models
1.2.2.1.Indigenous Reconstructed Claims and Regained Rights
1.2.2.2.Democratic Participation as Intercultural Deliberation
1.2.2.3.Legal Pluralism and The Resolution of Intercultural Conflicts
1.3.The Borders of Dialogue
1.3.1.The Normative Base of Intercultural Dialogue
1.3.2.Grice’s Conversational Maxims Interculturally Examined
1.4.Difficulties for Establishing Intercultural Normative Criteria for Dialogue
1.4.1.The Objection of Incommensurability as Radical Relativism
1.4.2.The Objection of Normativity as Neo-Colonialism
1.4.2.1.Interculturality as a Critique to Illegitimate Universalization
1.4.2.2.Between Dialectical and Dialogical Dialogue
1.5.Conclusion: A first Insight into the Function and Shape of the Intercultural Normative Criteria for Dialogue
2.Heterogenic Rationalities
2.1.Introduction
2.2.Rationalities as Culturally Relative Types of Logic
2.2.1.Problems with the Hypothesis of Logical Relativism
2.3.Rationalities as Incompatible Worldviews
2.3.1.The Case of Andean Rationality
2.3.2.Criticisms of the Idea of Different ‘Conceptual Schemes’
2.4.Rationalities as Alternative Reasoning Patterns
2.4.1.Rival Explanatory Patterns
2.4.1.1.Mythical Causality
2.4.1.2.Non Causal Explanatory Principles
2.4.2.Competing Patterns of Justification: the Word of Origin as Primary Ground
2.5.Conclusion
3.Towards an Intercultural Reasonableness
3.1.Introduction
3.2.From an Intercultural Theory of Rationality to a Notion of Intercultural Reasonableness
3.3.Assessing Reasonableness Interculturally: The Pragma-Dialectical Model
3.3.1.Does the Pragma-Dialectical Approach offer an Interculturally Valid Model of Reasonableness?
3.3.1.1.The Pragma-dialectical Reasonableness is Mono-cultural
3.3.1.2.The Pragma-dialectical Reasonableness does not avoid Relativism
3.3.1.3.A Critical Discussion does not fit the needs of Intercultural Dialogue
3.4.Rethinking Reasonableness Interculturally
3.4.1.Rationality and Reasonableness
3.4.2.Intercultural Reasonableness as Multi-logical Recognition and Interaction
3.4.3.Some Interculturally Unreasonable Moves in Dialogue
3.4.3.1.Appeal to radical difference
3.4.3.2.Illegitimate Universalization
3.4.3.3.Fictitious consensus
3.4.3.4.Argumentative violence
3.5.Conclusion
PART II: BUILDING INTERCULTURAL CHAKANAS
4.The Interconnection of Traditions I: An Interpretation of Intercultural Disagreements
4.1.Introduction
4.2.What is a Claim?
4.2.1.Claims as Complex Speech Acts
4.3.Types of Claims
4.3.1.Types of Conflicting Claims in Latin American Intercultural Dialogues
4.3.2.Habermas’ Argumentation Theory Interculturally Revisited
4.4.Types of Disagreements
4.5.Presuppositions of Disagreement
5.The Interconnection of Traditions II: Discursive Interpellation
5.1.Introduction
5.2.Challenge
5.3.Demand
5.4.Offering
5.5.‘Oppression’ and ‘Shared Problems’ as Factors of Interdependence
Conclusion: Pluralistic Argumentation
1.The Justification of Argumentative Intercultural Criteria
2.The Process of Intercultural Dialogue in Latin America
3.The Outcome of Dialogue
4.The Limits of the Argumentative Dimension of Intercultural Dialogue

Appendix: List of Intercultural Argumentative Criteria

Bibliography

Interculturality, Rationality and Dialogue

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