The Essential John Dewey: 20+ Books in One Edition

The Essential John Dewey: 20+ Books in One Edition
Автор книги: id книги: 1980990     Оценка: 0.0     Голосов: 0     Отзывы, комментарии: 0 0 руб.     (0$) Читать книгу Скачать бесплатно Купить бумажную книгу Электронная книга Жанр: Документальная литература Правообладатель и/или издательство: Bookwire Дата добавления в каталог КнигаЛит: ISBN: 9788027226009 Скачать фрагмент в формате   fb2   fb2.zip Возрастное ограничение: 0+ Оглавление Отрывок из книги

Реклама. ООО «ЛитРес», ИНН: 7719571260.

Описание книги

Musaicum Books presents to you this carefully created volume of «The Essential John Dewey: 20+ Books in One Edition». This ebook has been designed and formatted to the highest digital standards and adjusted for readability on all devices. Contents: German Philosophy and Politics Leibniz's New Essays Concerning the Human Understanding: A Critical Exposition Studies in Logical Theory Interpretation of Savage Mind Ethics The Problem of Values Soul and Body Logical Conditions of a Scientific Treatment of Morality The Evolutionary Method As Applied To Morality The Influence of Darwin on Philosophy Nature and Its Good: A conversation Intelligence and Morals The Experimental Theory of Knowledge The Intellectualist Criterion for Truth A Short Catechism Concerning Truth Beliefs and Existences Experience and Objective Idealism The Postulate of Immediate Empiricism "Consciousness" and Experience The Significance of the Problem of Knowledge Essays in Experimental Logic Reconstruction in Philosophy Does Reality Possess Practical Character? Criticisms of John Dewey The Chicago School John Dewey's Logical Theory The Pragmatic Theory of Truth as Developed by Peirce, James, and Dewey John Dewey (1859-1952) is one of the primary figures associated with the philosophy of pragmatism and is considered one of the founders of functional psychology. His ideas have been influential in education and social reform.

Оглавление

Джон Дьюи. The Essential John Dewey: 20+ Books in One Edition

The Essential John Dewey: 20+ Books in One Edition

Reading suggestions

Table of Contents

Philosophical Works

German Philosophy and Politics

Preface

I. German Philosophy: The Two Worlds

II. German Moral and Political Philosophy

III. The Germanic Philosophy of History

FOOTNOTES:

Leibniz's New Essays Concerning the Human Understanding: A Critical Exposition

Preface

Chapter I. The Man

Chapter II. The Sources of His Philosophy

Chapter III. The Problem, and its Solution

Chapter IV. Locke and Leibniz.—Innate Ideas

Chapter V. Sensation and Experience

Chapter VI. The Impulses and the Will

Chapter VII. Matter and its Relation to Spirit

Chapter VIII. Material Phenomena and Their Reality

Chapter IX. Some Fundamental Conceptions

Chapter X. The Nature and Extent of Knowledge

Chapter XI. The Theology of Leibniz

Chapter XII. Criticism and Conclusion

Studies in Logical Theory

Preface

I. Thought and its Subject-Matter: The General Problem of Logical Theory

II. Thought and its Subject-Matter: The Antecedent Conditions and Cues of the Thought-Function

III. Thought and its Subject-Matter: The Datum of Thinking

IV. Thought and its Subject-Matter: The Content and Object of Thought

V. A Critical Study of Bosanquet's Theory of Judgment44

VI. Typical Stages in the Development of Judgment

I

II

VII. The Nature of Hypothesis

I

II

III

VIII. Image and Idea in Logic

IX. The Logic of the Pre-Socratic Philosophy87

X. Valuation as a Logical Process

I

II

III

IV

V

VI

XI. Some Logical Aspects of Purpose

INTRODUCTORY

I. THE PURPOSIVE CHARACTER OF IDEAS

II. PURPOSE AND THE JUDGMENT

III. THE CRITERION OF TRUTH AND ERROR

IV. SUMMARY AND CONCLUSIONS

FOOTNOTES:

Interpretation of Savage Mind

Notes

Ethics (with James Hayden Tufts)

Preface

Chapter I. Introduction

§ 1. DEFINITION AND METHOD

§ 2. CRITERION OF THE MORAL

§ 3. DIVISIONS OF THE TREATMENT

LITERATURE

FOOTNOTES:

Part I. The Beginnings and Growth of Morality

GENERAL LITERATURE FOR PART I

Chapter II. Early Group Life

§ 1. TYPICAL FACTS OF GROUP LIFE

§ 2. KINSHIP AND HOUSEHOLD GROUPS

§ 3. THE KINSHIP AND FAMILY GROUPS ARE ALSO ECONOMIC AND INDUSTRIAL UNITS

§ 4. THE KINSHIP AND FAMILY GROUPS WERE POLITICAL BODIES

§ 5. THE KINSHIP OR HOUSEHOLD GROUP WAS A RELIGIOUS UNIT

§ 6. GROUPS OR CLASSES ON THE BASIS OF AGE AND SEX

§ 7. MORAL SIGNIFICANCE OF THE KINDRED AND OTHER GROUPS

LITERATURE

FOOTNOTES:

Chapter III. The Rationalizing and Socializing Agencies in Early Society

§ 1. THREE LEVELS OF CONDUCT

§ 2. RATIONALIZING AGENCIES

§ 3. SOCIALIZING AGENCIES

§ 4. FAMILY LIFE AS AN IDEALIZING AND SOCIALIZING AGENCY

§ 5. MORAL INTERPRETATION OF THIS FIRST LEVEL

LITERATURE

FOOTNOTES:

Chapter IV. Group Morality—Customs or Mores

§ 1. MEANING, AUTHORITY, AND ORIGIN OF CUSTOMS

§ 2. MEANS OF ENFORCING CUSTOMS

§ 3. CONDITIONS WHICH BRING OUT THE IMPORTANCE OF GROUP STANDARDS AND RENDER GROUP CONTROL CONSCIOUS

§ 4. VALUES AND DEFECTS OF CUSTOMARY MORALITY

LITERATURE

FOOTNOTES:

Chapter V. From Custom to Conscience; From Group Morality to Personal Morality

§ 1. CONTRAST AND COLLISION

§ 2. SOCIOLOGICAL AGENCIES IN THE TRANSITION

§ 3. THE PSYCHOLOGICAL AGENCIES

§ 4. POSITIVE RECONSTRUCTION

LITERATURE

FOOTNOTES:

Chapter VI. The Hebrew Moral Development

§ 1. GENERAL CHARACTER AND DETERMINING PRINCIPLES

§ 2. RELIGIOUS AGENCIES

§ 3. THE MORAL CONCEPTIONS ATTAINED

LITERATURE

FOOTNOTES:

Chapter VII. The Moral Development of the Greeks

§ 1. THE FUNDAMENTAL NOTES

§ 2. INTELLECTUAL FORCES OF INDIVIDUALISM

§ 3. COMMERCIAL AND POLITICAL INDIVIDUALISM

§ 4. INDIVIDUALISM AND ETHICAL THEORY

§ 5. THE DEEPER VIEW OF NATURE AND THE GOOD; OF THE INDIVIDUAL AND THE SOCIAL ORDER

§ 6. THE CONCEPTION OF THE IDEAL

§ 7. THE CONCEPTION OF THE SELF; OF CHARACTER AND RESPONSIBILITY

LITERATURE

FOOTNOTES:

CHAPTER VIII. The Modern Period

§ 1. THE MEDIÆVAL IDEALS

§ 2. MAIN LINES OF MODERN DEVELOPMENT

§ 3. THE OLD AND NEW IN THE BEGINNINGS OF INDIVIDUALISM

§ 4. INDIVIDUALISM IN THE PROGRESS OF LIBERTY AND DEMOCRACY

§ 5. INDIVIDUALISM AS AFFECTED BY THE DEVELOPMENT OF INDUSTRY, COMMERCE, AND ART

§ 6. THE INDIVIDUAL AND THE DEVELOPMENT OF INTELLIGENCE

LITERATURE

FOOTNOTES:

CHAPTER IX. A General Comparison of Customary and Reflective Morality

§ 1. ELEMENTS OF AGREEMENT AND CONTINUITY

§ 2. ELEMENTS OF CONTRAST

§ 3. OPPOSITION BETWEEN INDIVIDUAL AND SOCIAL AIMS AND STANDARDS

§ 4. EFFECTS UPON THE INDIVIDUAL CHARACTER

§ 5. MORAL DIFFERENTIATION AND THE SOCIAL ORDER

FOOTNOTES:

Part II. Theory of the Moral Life

GENERAL LITERATURE FOR PART II

Chapter X. The Moral Situation

LITERATURE

FOOTNOTES:

Chapter XI. Problems of Moral Theory

LITERATURE

FOOTNOTES:

Chapter XII. Types of Moral Theory

§ 1. TYPICAL DIVISIONS OF THEORIES

§ 2. DIVISION OF VOLUNTARY ACTIVITY INTO INNER AND OUTER

§ 3. GENERAL INTERPRETATION OF THESE THEORIES

LITERATURE

FOOTNOTES:

Chapter XIII. Conduct and Character

§ 1. THE GOOD WILL OF KANT

§ 2. THE "INTENTION" OF THE UTILITARIANS

§ 3. CONDUCT AND CHARACTER

§ 4. MORALITY OF ACTS AND OF AGENTS

LITERATURE

FOOTNOTES:

Chapter XIV. Happiness and Conduct: The Good and Desire

§ 1. THE OBJECT OF DESIRE

§ 2. THE CONCEPTION OF HAPPINESS AS A STANDARD

§ 3. THE CONSTITUTION OF HAPPINESS

LITERATURE

FOOTNOTES:

Chapter XV. Happiness and Social Ends139

LITERATURE

FOOTNOTES:

Chapter XVI. The Place of Reason in the Moral Life: Moral Knowledge

§ 1. PROBLEM OF REASON AND DESIRE

§ 2. KANT'S THEORY OF PRACTICAL REASON

§ 3. MORAL SENSE INTUITIONALISM

§ 4. THE PLACE OF GENERAL RULES

LITERATURE

FOOTNOTES:

Chapter XVII. The Place of Duty in the Moral Life: Subjection to Authority

§ 1. THE SUBJECTION OF DESIRE TO LAW

§ 2. KANTIAN THEORY

§ 3. THE UTILITARIAN THEORY OF DUTY

§ 3. FINAL STATEMENT

LITERATURE

FOOTNOTES:

Chapter XVIII. The Place of the Self in the Moral Life

§ 1. THE DOCTRINE OF SELF-DENIAL

§ 2. SELF-ASSERTION

§ 3. SELF-LOVE AND BENEVOLENCE; OR, EGOISM AND ALTRUISM

§ 4. THE GOOD AS SELF-REALIZATION

LITERATURE

FOOTNOTES:

Chapter XIX. The Virtues

INTRODUCTORY

§ 1. TEMPERANCE

§ 2. COURAGE191 OR PERSISTENT VIGOR

§ 3. JUSTICE

§ 4. WISDOM OR CONSCIENTIOUSNESS

LITERATURE

FOOTNOTES:

Part III. The World of Action

GENERAL LITERATURE FOR PART III

Chapter XX. Social Organization and the Individual

§ 1. GROWTH OF INDIVIDUALITY THROUGH SOCIAL ORGANIZATIONS

§ 2. RESPONSIBILITY AND FREEDOM

§ 3. RIGHTS AND OBLIGATIONS

LITERATURE

FOOTNOTES:

Chapter XXI. Civil Society and the Political State

§ 1. CIVIL RIGHTS AND OBLIGATIONS

§ 2. DEVELOPMENT OF CIVIL RIGHTS

§ 3. POLITICAL RIGHTS AND OBLIGATIONS

§ 4. THE MORAL CRITERION OF POLITICAL ACTIVITY

LITERATURE

FOOTNOTES:

Chapter XXII. The Ethics of the Economic Life

§ 1. GENERAL ANALYSIS

§ 2. THE PROBLEMS SET BY THE NEW ECONOMIC ORDER

§ 3. THE AGENCIES FOR CARRYING ON COMMERCE AND INDUSTRY

§ 4. THE METHODS OF PRODUCTION, EXCHANGE, AND VALUATION

§ 5. THE FACTORS WHICH AID ETHICAL RECONSTRUCTION

LITERATURE

FOOTNOTES:

Chapter XXIII. Some Principles in the Economic Order

LITERATURE

FOOTNOTES:

Chapter XXIV. Unsettled Problems in the Economic Order

§ 1. GENERAL STATEMENT OF THE POSITIONS OF INDIVIDUALISM AND OF PUBLIC AGENCY AND CONTROL

§ 2. INDIVIDUALISM OR FREE CONTRACT ANALYZED: ITS VALUES

§ 3. CRITICISMS UPON INDIVIDUALISM

LITERATURE

FOOTNOTES:

Chapter XXV. Unsettled Problems in the Economic Order (Continued)

§ 4. THE THEORY OF PUBLIC AGENCY AND CONTROL

§ 5. SOCIETY AS AGENCY OF PRODUCTION

§ 6. THEORIES OF JUST DISTRIBUTION

§ 7. OWNERSHIP AND USE OF PROPERTY

§ 8. PRESENT TENDENCIES

§ 9. THREE SPECIAL PROBLEMS

APPENDIX TO CHAPTER XXV. PROFESSOR SEAGER'S PROGRAMME OF SOCIAL LEGISLATION. WITH SPECIAL REFERENCE TO WAGE-EARNERS

FOOTNOTES:

Chapter XXVI. The Family

§ 1. HISTORICAL ANTECEDENTS OF THE MODERN FAMILY

§ 2. THE PSYCHOLOGICAL BASIS OF THE FAMILY

§ 3. GENERAL ELEMENTS OF STRAIN IN FAMILY RELATIONS

§ 4. SPECIAL CONDITIONS WHICH GIVE RISE TO PRESENT PROBLEMS

§ 5. UNSETTLED PROBLEMS: (1) ECONOMIC

§ 6. UNSETTLED PROBLEMS: (2) POLITICAL

LITERATURE

FOOTNOTES:

The Problem of Values

Soul and Body

Notes

Logical Conditions of a Scientific Treatment of Morality

1. The Use of the Term "Scientific"

2. The Possibility of Logical Control of Moral Judgments

3. Nature of Scientific Judgments

4. The Logical Character of Ethical Judgment

5. The Categories of a Science of Ethics

6. Psychological Analysis as a Condition of Controlling Ethical Judgements

7. Sociological Analysis As a Condition of Controlling Ethical Judgments

Summary

Notes

The Evolutionary Method As Applied To Morality: Its Scientific Necessity & Its Significance for Conduct

I. Its Scientific Necessity

II. Its Significance for Conduct

Notes

The Influence of Darwin on Philosophy1

I

II

III

IV

Endnotes

Nature and Its Good: A conversation1

Endnotes

Intelligence and Morals1

Endnotes

The Experimental Theory of Knowledge1

I

II

III

IV

Endnotes

The Intellectualist Criterion for Truth1

I

II

III

IV

Endnotes

A Short Catechism Concerning Truth1

Endnotes

Beliefs and Existences1

I

II

III

IV

Endnotes

Experience and Objective Idealism1

I

II

III

IV

Endnotes

The Postulate of Immediate Empiricism1

Endnotes

"Consciousness" and Experience1

Endnotes

The Significance of the Problem of Knowledge1

Endnotes

Essays in Experimental Logic

Prefatory Note

I. Introduction

I

II

III

IV

V

VI

VII

II. The Relationship of Thought and its Subject-Matter

III. The Antecedents and Stimuli of Thinking

IV. Data and Meanings

V. The Objects of Thought

VI. Some Stages of Logical Thought

VII. The Logical Character of Ideas

VIII. The Control of Ideas by Facts

I

II

III

IV

IX. Naïve Realism vs. Presentative Realism58

I

II

III

IV

X. Epistemological Realism: The Alleged Ubiquity of the Knowledge Relation

I

II

III

XI. The Existence of the World as a Logical Problem

I

II

XII. What Pragmatism Means by Practical

I

II

III

XIII. An Added Note as to the "Practical"

XIV. The Logic of Judgments of Practice

THEIR NATURE

JUDGMENTS OF VALUE

SENSE PERCEPTION AS KNOWLEDGE

SCIENCE AS A PRACTICAL ART

THEORY AND PRACTICE

FOOTNOTES:

Reconstruction in Philosophy

Prefatory Note

Chapter I. Changing Conceptions of Philosophy

Chapter II. Some Historical Factors in Philosophical Reconstruction

Chapter III. The Scientific Factor in Reconstruction of Philosophy

Chapter IV. Changed Conceptions of Experience and Reason

Chapter V. Changed Conceptions of the Ideal and the Real

Chapter VI. The Significance of Logical Reconstruction

Chapter VII. Reconstruction in Moral Conceptions

Chapter VIII. Reconstruction as Affecting Social Philosophy

Does Reality Possess Practical Character?

I

II

III

IV

V

Notes

Criticisms of John Dewey

The Chicago School1 by William James

Footnotes

John Dewey's Logical Theory. by Delton Thomas Howard

Preface

FOOTNOTE:

Chapter I "Psychology as Philosophic Method"

FOOTNOTES:

Chapter II. The Development of the Psychological Standpoint

FOOTNOTES:

Chapter III "Moral Theory and Practice"

FOOTNOTES:

Chapter IV. Functional Psychology

FOOTNOTES:

Chapter V. The Evolutionary Standpoint

FOOTNOTES:

Chapter VI "Studies in Logical Theory"

FOOTNOTES:

Chapter VII. The Polemical Period

FOOTNOTES:

Chapter VIII. Later Developments

FOOTNOTES:

Chapter IX. Conclusions

FOOTNOTES:

The Pragmatic Theory of Truth as Developed by Peirce, James, and Dewey. by Denton Loring Geyer

Introductory

Chapter I. The Pragmatic Doctrine as Originally Proposed by Peirce

Chapter II. The Interpretation Given to Pragmatism by James

James’ Exposition of Peirce

Development of the Doctrine through the Earlier Writings of James

The Theory of Truth in ‘Pragmatism’ and ‘The Meaning of Truth’

Chapter III. The Pragmatic Doctrine as Set Forth by Dewey

Contrast Between James and Dewey

Chapter IV. Summary and Conclusion

Footnotes

Bibliography

The Works of Charles Sanders Peirce

The Works of William James

The Works of John Dewey

Works on Truth

Works on Pragmatism

Отрывок из книги

John Dewey

German Philosophy and Politics

.....

It is Bernhardi who says:

"Two great movements were born from the German intellectual life, on which, henceforth, all the intellectual and moral progress of mankind must rest:—The Reformation and the critical philosophy. The Reformation that broke the intellectual yoke imposed by the Church, which checked all free progress; and the Critique of Pure Reason which put a stop to the caprice of philosophic speculation by defining for the human mind the limitations of its capacities for knowledge, and at the same time pointed out the way in which knowledge is really possible. On this substructure was developed the intellectual life of our time, whose deepest significance consists in the attempt to reconcile the result of free inquiry with the religious needs of the heart, and thus to lay a foundation for the harmonious organization of mankind. . . . The German nation not only laid the foundations of this great struggle for a harmonious development of humanity but took the lead in it. We are thus incurring an obligation for the future from which we cannot shrink. We must be prepared to be the leader in this campaign which is being fought for the highest stake that has been offered to human efforts. . . . To no nation except the German has it been given to enjoy in its inner self 'that which is given to mankind as a whole.' . . . It is this quality which especially fits us for leadership in the intellectual domain and imposes upon us the obligation to maintain that position."1

.....

Добавление нового отзыва

Комментарий Поле, отмеченное звёздочкой  — обязательно к заполнению

Отзывы и комментарии читателей

Нет рецензий. Будьте первым, кто напишет рецензию на книгу The Essential John Dewey: 20+ Books in One Edition
Подняться наверх