The coming-of-age of American pragmatism
John Dewey
pp. 69-111
Abstrakt
American pragmatism reaches its highest level of sophisticated articulation and engaged elaboration in the works and life of John Dewey. To put it crudely, if Emerson is the American Vico, and James and Peirce our John Stuart Mill and Immanuel Kant, then Dewey is the American Hegel and Marx! On the surface, these farfetched comparisons reveal the poverty of the American philosophical tradition, the paucity of intellectual world-historical figures in the American grain. But on a deeper level, these comparisons disclose a distinctive feature of American pragmatism: its diversity circumscribed by the Emersonian evasion of epistemology-centered philosophy and the Emersonian theodicy of the self and America.
Publication details
Published in:
West Cornel (1989) The American evasion of philosophy: a genealogy of pragmatism. Basingstoke, Palgrave Macmillan.
Seiten: 69-111
DOI: 10.1007/978-1-349-20415-1_4
Referenz:
West Cornel (1989) The coming-of-age of American pragmatism: John Dewey, In: The American evasion of philosophy, Basingstoke, Palgrave Macmillan, 69–111.