
The Promise of Pragmatism
by Diggins, John PatrickRent Textbook
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Summary
Table of Contents
Acknowledgments | |
Introduction | |
The Disenchantment of the World | |
The Flowering of Intellect and the Decline of Knowledge Politics and Ethics | |
The Cunning of Irony Science: Experimentation, Rationalization, or Acceleration? | |
The "Thirst for the Deed," the Bolshevik Revolution, and "Romantic" Pragmatism History: Evolution or Alienation? | |
Who Bore the Failure of the Light: Henry Adams | |
The Hand of the Father | |
The Failure of Classical Ideals History and the Problem of Consciousness | |
Science and the Fate of the Universe Four Problems of Modernism: Authority, Faith, Art, Love | |
The Pragmatic Affirmation: William James and the Will to Believe James and Adams's "Serial Law Fallacy" | |
The "Murdered Self" and the Riddle of Consciousness Beyond Rationalism and Empiricism | |
The Right to Choose One's Own Beliefs "Towards Action and Towards Power" | |
Truth as Pleasure, Knowledge as the Disposition to Believe Pragmatism and Its Paradoxes | |
Doubt and Deliverance: Charles Sanders Peirce and the Authority of Science "Proud Man/His Glassy Essence" | |
"Thought Is More Without Us Than Within" | |
Peirce versus James Between Realism and Nominalism | |
Adams and Peirce Synechism, Tychism, and the Dialectic of Doubt and Belief | |
The Objectivity Question Truth as Consensus | |
"The Flickering Candles of Consciousness" | |
John Dewey and the Challenge of Uncertainty | |
"Imagination in Action" | |
Dewey in Love "An Inward Laceration" | |
The Tension between Religion and Science | |
The False Quest for Certainty Alienation and the Origins of Mind | |
The Authority of Scientific Inquiry and the Problem of "Truth" Empirical Method and Moral Knowledge | |
Focusing on the Foreground: Dewey and the Problem of Historical Knowledge World War I and the Dewey-Bourne Debate | |
The Appeal to the Future | |
The Trotsky Inquiry and the Debate over Means and Ends World War II and the Double Irony of Philosophy and History | |
Pragmatism and the Problem of Power | |
The Challenge of Fascism | |
The Obscure Object of Power: Reinhold Niebuhr and Original Sin Dewey and the Classical Tradition | |
The Great Community: Politics as Contro The Child and the Curriculum: Education as Freedom | |
"The Acids of Modernity": Walter Lippmann and Oliver Wendell Holmes | |
The Odyssey of a Political Moralist Science and the Legitimacy of Government From Pragmatism and "The Phantom Public" to Natural Law | |
The Battle for America's Political Mind: Lippmann versus Dewey Holmes's Quarrel with the Pragmatists Legal Realism and Poststructuralism | |
Self and Society | |
The Socialization of Authority and the Fate of the Individual | |
Mead Classical and Christian Morality and the Disappearance of the Self | |
The Opposing Self: Lionel Trilling | |
The Decline and Revival of American Pragmatism | |
"The Corruption of Liberalism" | |
"The New Failure of Nerve": Sydney Hook's Response to Mortimer | |
Communism and the Vietnam War Epistemology Is Dead, Long Live Pragmatism: Richard Rorty's Quarrel with Philosophy as Theory | |
In Defense of the Enlightenment: Jurgen Habermas and the Promise of "Communicative Action" | |
The Case of the Progressive Historians | |
Conclusion: Poststructuralism and America's Intellectual Traditions | |
Philosophy as "Prophylactic": The Lost Legacy of the American | |
Founders Niebuhr and the Illusions of Poststructuralism | |
The Limits of Communication: Habermas Rorty's Political Thought and the Deweyan Legacy Against | |
Theory and the Limits of Redescription: Thorstein Veblen Emerson, Silence, and the Limits of Persuasion | |
The Return to History and the Temptation of "Agreeable Tales" | |
Index | |
Table of Contents provided by Publisher. All Rights Reserved. |
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