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John Dewey: Experience and nature (1926, Open court Publishing Company)

443 pages

English language

Published June 24, 1926 by Open court Publishing Company.

OCLC Number:
3518684

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(2 reviews)

10 editions

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Dewey is interested in processes and relations rather than essences and things-itself. In this he seems to be similar to Whitehead (“Process and Experience”). However, Dewey is much closer to everyday human experience, it can be well read along works like Schütz’s “The structures of the life-world”.

The book criticizes that most philosophy focusses on what seems stable and universal, given and ignores change, process, choice. I was reminded of David Graeber (“What is the point when we can't have fun”) when Dewey discusses philosophy’s disregard for joy.

Dewey loves modern experimental science and invention, but he focusses a lot on its processual elements and on experiments. His view is rather idealized obviously. But matching his other views, Dewey does not focus on science as truth-production and criticizes that the scientific perspective neglects direct qualities in favor of discovered abstract models as real.

The style of writing is OK, the …

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Subjects

  • Experience
  • Philosophy