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Pragmatism as Post-Postmodernism
Lessons from John Dewey
Larry A. Hickman
$30.00
ISBN: 9780823228423 Book (Paperback) Fordham University Press 288 pages December 2007
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Larry A. Hickman presents John Dewey as very much at home in the busy mix of contemporary
philosophy—as a thinker whose work now, more than fifty years after his death, still furnishes
fresh insights into cutting-edge philosophical debates. Hickman argues that it is precisely the
rich, pluralistic mix of contemporary philosophical discourse, with its competing research
programs in French-inspired postmodernism, phenomenology, Critical Theory, Heidegger
studies, analytic philosophy, and neopragmatism—all busily engaging, challenging, and informing
one another—that invites renewed examination of Dewey’s central ideas.
Hickman offers a Dewey who both anticipated some of the central insights of French-inspired
postmodernism and, if he were alive today, would certainly be one of its most committed critics,
a Dewey who foresaw some of the most trenchant problems associated with fostering global
citizenship, and a Dewey whose core ideas are often at odds with those of some of his most
ardent neopragmatist interpreters.
In the trio of essays that launch this book, Dewey is an observer and critic of some of the central
features of French-inspired postmodernism and its American cousin, neopragmatism. In the
next four, Dewey enters into dialogue with contemporary critics of technology, including Jürgen
Habermas, Andrew Feenberg, and Albert Borgmann. The next two essays establish Dewey as an
environmental philosopher of the first rank—a worthy conversation partner for Holmes Ralston,
III, Baird Callicott, Bryan G. Norton, and Aldo Leopold. The concluding essays provide novel
interpretations of Dewey’s views of religious belief, the psychology of habit, philosophical
anthropology, and what he termed “the epistemology industry.”
| LARRY A. HICKMAN is director of the Center for Dewey Studies and Professor of Philosophy at
Southern Illinois University, Carbondale. He is the author of Modern Theories of Higher Level
Predicates, John Dewey’s Pragmatic Technology, and Philosophical Tools for Technological
Culture. He is also the editor of Technology as a Human Affair, Reading Dewey, The Essential
Dewey (with Thomas Alexander), the electronic edition of The Collected Works of John Dewey,
1882–1953, and the three volumes of The Correspondence of John Dewey, 1871–1952. |
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