What constitutes American thought is obviously too elusive to be
encompassed by any one writer or group of writers. The best that
any attempt at intellectual history can achieve is to indicate some
of its traces in written records. This volume represents the eff
orts of one of America's leading philosophers to do just that. He
is uniquely qualified to do so, as his contemporary Sidney Hook
well understood.
As Cohen noted, most of what people say and write is dominated
by linguistic forms or habits. Thus the dominance of the traditions
and habits that make up the English language has been the strongest
single infl uence in fashioning American thought as very largely a
province of British thought--despite the Declaration of
Independence and two wars. Cohen describes how American thought
developed from its British roots. It deals with reflective thought,
i.e. with thought that is conscious of its problems, of its methods
and of the widest general bearings of the results obtained so far.
The diverse subjects discussed range from religious thinking to the
scientific, and from the legal tradition to literary criticism.
Among the important figures Cohen assesses are Dewey,
Santayana, Holmes, Brandeis, Whitehead, James, and Royce as well as
those of men less well-known but sometimes equally influential. In
its scope and insight, this book takes its own unique and important
place in American thought.
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