𝔖 Scriptorium
✦   LIBER   ✦

πŸ“

Faith in Life: John Dewey's Early Philosophy

✍ Scribed by Donald J. Morse


Publisher
Fordham University Press
Year
2011
Tongue
English
Leaves
331
Series
(American Philosophy)
Category
Library

⬇  Acquire This Volume

No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.

✦ Synopsis


This is the first book to consider John Dewey’s early philosophy on its own terms and to explicate its key ideas. It does so through the fullest treatment to date of his youthful masterwork, the Psychology.

This fuller treatment reveals that the received view, which sees Dewey’s early philosophy as unimportant in its own right, is deeply mistaken. In fact, Dewey’s early philosophy amounts to an important new form of idealism.

More specifically, Dewey’s idealism contains a new logic of rupture, which allows us to achieve four things:

β€’ A focus on discontinuity that challenges all naturalistic views, including Dewey’s own later view;
β€’ A space of critical resistance to events that is at the same time the source of ideals;
β€’ A faith in the development of ideals that challenges pessimists like Schopenhauer and Nietzsche; and
β€’ A non-traditional reading of Hegel that invites comparison with cutting-edge Continental philosophers, such as Adorno, Derrida, and Zizek, and even goes beyond them in its systematic approach;

In making these discoveries, the author forges a new link between American and European philosophy, showing how they share similar insights and concerns. He also provides an original assessment of Dewey’s relationship to his teacher, George Sylvester Morris, and to other important thinkers of the day, giving us a fresh picture of John Dewey, the man and the philosopher, in the early years of his career.

Readers will find a wide range of topics discussed, from Dewey’s early reflections on Kant and Hegel to the nature of beauty, courage, sympathy, hatred, love, and even death and despair.

This is a book for anyone interested in the thought of John Dewey, American pragmatism, Continental Philosophy, or a new idealism appearing on the scene.


πŸ“œ SIMILAR VOLUMES


Dewey's Metaphysics: Form and Being in t
✍ Raymond Boisvert πŸ“‚ Library πŸ“… 2019 πŸ› Fordham University Press 🌐 English

<p>Whitehead’s response to the epistemological challenges of Hume and Kant, written in a style devoid of the metaphysical intricacies of his later works, Symbolism makes accessible his theory of perception and his more general insights into the function of symbols in culture and society.</p>

Dewey's Metaphysics: Form and Being in t
✍ Raymond D. Boisvert πŸ“‚ Library πŸ“… 2018 πŸ› Fordham University Press 🌐 English

Whitehead's response to the epistemological challenges of Hume and Kant, written in a style devoid of the metaphysical intricacies of his later works, Symbolism makes accessible his theory of perception and his more general insights into the function of symbols in culture and society. Dewey's Met

Bad Faith, Good Faith and Authenticity i
✍ Ronald Santoni πŸ“‚ Library πŸ“… 1995 πŸ› Temple University Press 🌐 English

<DIV><P> From the beginning to the end of his philosophizing, Sartre appears to have been concerned with "bad faith"β€”our "natural" disposition to flee from our freedom and to lie to ourselves. Virtually no aspect of his monumental system has generated more attention. Yet bad faith has been plagued

John Dewey and Environmental Philosophy
✍ H. P. McDonald πŸ“‚ Library πŸ“… 2003 πŸ› State University of New York Press 🌐 English

Hugh P. McDonald’s John Dewey and Environmental Philosophy breaks new ground by applying Dewey’s insights to a new approach to philosophy of the environment; the concern for the rights of animals; the preservation of rare species, habitats, and landscapes; and the health of the whole ecology. The bo

John Dewey and Continental Philosophy
✍ Paul Fairfield (editor) πŸ“‚ Library πŸ“… 2010 πŸ› Southern Illinois University Press 🌐 English

OC These essays build a valuable, if virtual, bridge between the thought of John Dewey and that of a host of modern European philosophers. They invite us to entertain a set of imagined conversations among the mighty dead that no doubt would have intrigued Dewey and each of the interlocutors gathered