In contemporary philosophical debates in the United States
"redefining pragmatism" has become the conventional way to flag
significant philosophical contests and to launch large conceptual
and programmatic changes. This book analyzes the contributions of
such developments in light of the classic formulations of Charles
S. Peirce and John Dewey and the interaction between pragmatism and
analytic philosophy. American pragmatism was revived quite
unexpectedly in the 1970s by Richard Rorty's philosophical
heterodoxy and his running dispute with Hilary Putnam, who, like
Rorty, is a professed Deweyan.
Reinventing Pragmatism examines the force of the new
pragmatisms, from the emergence of Rorty's and Putnam's basic
disagreements of the 1970s until the turn of the century. Joseph
Margolis considers the revival of a movement generally thought to
have ended by the 1950s as both a surprise and a turn of great
importance. The quarrel between Rorty and Putnam obliged American
philosophers, and eventually Eurocentric philosophy as a whole, to
reconsider the direction of American and European philosophy, for
instance in terms of competing accounts of realism and
naturalism.
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