Preeminent American philosopher and educator John Dewey (1859-1952) rejected Hegelian idealism for the pragmatism of William James. In this collection of informal originally published between 1897 and 1909, Dewey articulates his now classic philosophical concepts of knowledge and truth and the nature of reality. Here Dewey introduces his scientific method and uses critical intelligence to reject the traditional ways of viewing philosophical discourse. Knowledge cannot be divorced from experience; it is gradually acquired through interaction with nature. Philosophy, therefore, has to be regarded as itself a method of knowledge and not as a repository of disembodied, pre-existing absolute truths.
Pragmatism : A New Name for Some Old Ways of Thinking
Dr. William James
bookThe Meaning of Truth
Dr. William James
bookThe William James Reader
Dr. William James
bookThe Meaning of Truth
Dr. William James
bookWhat is an Emotion?
Dr. William James
bookEssays in Radical Empiricism
Dr. William James
bookThe Varieties of Religious Experience
Dr. William James
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Victory
Joseph Conrad
audiobookbookTales Of Unrest
Joseph Conrad
audiobookbookOur Mutual Friend
Charles Dickens
audiobookbookWet Magic
Edith Nesbit
bookJurgen : A Comedy of Justice
James Branch Cabell
bookThe Entire Original Maupassant Short
Guy de Maupassant
bookThe Confessions of Jean Jacques Rouss
Jean Jacques Rousseau
bookThe Riddle of the Sands
Eskrine Childres
bookThe Mystery of the Hasty Arrow
Anna Katharine Green
bookThe Gentlemen's Book of Etiquette, an
Cecil B. Hartley
bookThe Kama Sutra of Vatsayayana
Vatsayayana Vatsayayana
bookThe Rover Boys on the Ocean
Edward Stratemeyer
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