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This volume republishes forty-four essays, reviews, and
miscellaneous pieces from 1939, 1940, and 1941. Â In his
Introduction, R. W. Sleeper characterizes the contents of this
volume as “vintage Dewey. Ranging widely over problems of theory
and practice, they reveal him commencing his ninth decade at the
peak of his intellectual powers.”  “Nature in
Experience,” Dewey’s reply to Morris R. Cohen and William
Ernest Hocking, “is a model of clarity and responsiveness,”
writes Sleeper, “perhaps his clearest statement of why it is that
metaphysics does not play the fundamental role for him that it had
regularly played for his predecessors.”
Hailed as "the most important overall reassessment of Dewey in
several decades" (Sidney Ratner, Journal of Speculative
Philosophy), The Necessity of Pragmatism investigates the most
difficult and neglected aspects of Dewey's thought, his metaphysics
and logic. R. W. Sleeper argues for a fundamental unity in Dewey's
work, a unity that rests on his philosophy of language, and
clarifies Dewey's conception of pragmatism as an action-based
philosophy with the power to effect social change through criticism
and inquiry. Identifying Dewey's differences with his pragmatist
forerunners, Charles Sanders Peirce and William James, Sleeper
elucidates Dewey's reshaping of pragmatism and the radical
significance of his philosophy of culture. In this first paperback
edition, a new introduction by Tom Burke establishes the ongoing
importance of Sleeper's analysis of the integrity of Dewey's work
and its implications for mathematics, aesthetics, and the cognitive
sciences.
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