Abstract
Retrieving Realism renders the joint philosophical goals of
Hubert Dreyfus and Charles Taylor into what is probably
their final and most concise form. It has two main
objectives: first, it aims to deconstruct the mediationalism
that undergirds Western philosophy, and second, it
endorses contact theory, or embodied/embedded coping,
as an alternative. In this essay, I present the book’s most
salient themes and reveal areas that are ripe for further
philosophical consideration. I also direct the reader to the
work’s genuine ontological challenge: how to come to
grips with contact theory beyond the borders of
epistemology.