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This volume is composed of extended versions of selected papers
presented at an international conference held in June 2011 at Opole
University-the seventh in a series of annual American and European
Values conferences organized by the Institute of Philosophy, Opole
University, Poland. The papers were written independently with no
prior guidelines other than the obvious need to address some aspect
of George Herbert Mead's work. While rooted in careful study of
Mead's original writings and transcribed lectures and the
historical context in which that work was carried out, these papers
have brought that work to bear on contemporary issues in
metaphysics, epistemology, cognitive science, and social and
political philosophy. There is good reason to classify Mead as one
of the original classical American pragmatists (along with Charles
Peirce, William James, and John Dewey) and consequently as a major
figure in American philosophy. Nevertheless his thought has been
marginalized for the most part, at least in academic philosophy. It
is our intention to help recuperate Mead's reputation among a
broader audience by providing a small corpus of significant
contemporary scholarship on some key aspects of his thought.
This volume is composed of extended versions of selected papers
presented at an international conference held in June 2011 at Opole
University-the seventh in a series of annual American and European
Values conferences organized by the Institute of Philosophy, Opole
University, Poland. The papers were written independently with no
prior guidelines other than the obvious need to address some aspect
of George Herbert Mead's work. While rooted in careful study of
Mead's original writings and transcribed lectures and the
historical context in which that work was carried out, these papers
have brought that work to bear on contemporary issues in
metaphysics, epistemology, cognitive science, and social and
political philosophy. There is good reason to classify Mead as one
of the original classical American pragmatists (along with Charles
Peirce, William James, and John Dewey) and consequently as a major
figure in American philosophy. Nevertheless his thought has been
marginalized for the most part, at least in academic philosophy. It
is our intention to help recuperate Mead's reputation among a
broader audience by providing a small corpus of significant
contemporary scholarship on some key aspects of his thought.
The sixteen chapters of Josiah Royce for the Twenty-first Century
are papers from the Fourth Annual Conference on American and
European Values / International Conference on Josiah Royce, held at
the Institute of Philosophy, University of Opole, Poland in June
2008. The presentation of diverse perspectives, and the development
of many distinctive, promising strands of inquiry from the spring
of Royce s work, establish that Royce offers significant resources
for a number of areas of contemporary philosophy. The book is
organized into four parts: (I) Historical Reinterpretations, (II)
Ethics: Interpretations of Loyalty, (III) Religious Philosophy, and
(IV) Contemporary Implications. Section I considers Royce s
position in the history if ideas, with papers on his account of
individuation, his expansion on a key idea from Kant, his use and
contribution to mathematical and philosophical conceptions of the
infinite and the absolute, and his adaptation of Peircean
semiotics. Sections II and III consist of focused readings of Royce
s work regarding ethics and religious philosophy, respectively.
Section IV is the most diverse in the topics covered, with papers
that bring Royce into contemporary discussions of psychology, of
the problem of reference, of Rortyan neo-pragmatism, and of
literary aesthetics. The purpose of the Opole conference was to
elicit fresh perspectives on the work of Josiah Royce from an
international group of contributors. This collection achieves that
aim by presenting new approaches to relatively familiar writings,
by drawing out promising implications of Roycean themes, and by
making genuinely new applications of his ideas. Josiah Royce for
the Twenty-first Century presents a rich interaction among a
diverse mix of commentators, who retrieve and construct promising
new insights from the work of one of America's greatest thinkers."
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