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Pragmatism

Chapter 12: BIBLIOGRAPHY
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About This Book

The author traces the emergence and varieties of pragmatic philosophy, linking developments in psychology and a renewed emphasis on will with a critique of intellectualism and formal logic. He examines how social life exposes naive dogmatism, explores methods for distinguishing truth from error among competing opinions, and argues that truth must be appraised by practical consequences rather than abstract absolutes. Throughout, the work diagnoses the limits of purely formal reasoning, defends a reformist conception of logic grounded in meaning and experience, and connects theoretical claims to their effects on conduct and inquiry.

BIBLIOGRAPHY

WILLIAM JAMES:

The Principles of Psychology, 1890.

The Will to Believe, and Other Essays in Popular Philosophy, 1897.

The Varieties of Religious Experience, 1902.

Pragmatism, a New Name for Some Old Ways of Thinking, 1907.

A Pluralistic Universe, 1909.

The Meaning of Truth, 1909.

Some Problems of Philosophy, 1911.

Radical Empiricism, 1912.


F.C.S. SCHILLER:

Riddles of the Sphinx, 1891 (revised edition, 1910).

Axioms as Postulates (in Personal Idealism, ed. Henry

Sturt, 1902).

Humanism: Philosophical Essays, 1903.

Studies in Humanism, 1907.

Formal Logic, a Scientific and Social Problem, 1912.


HENRY STURT:

Idola Theatri, a Criticism of Oxford Thought and Thinkers from the

Standpoint of Personal Idealism, 1906.


J. DEWEY AND OTHERS:

Studies in Logical Theory, 1903.


J. DEWEY:

The Influence of Darwinism, and Other Essays, 1910.


H.V. KNOX:

The Evolution of Truth. Quarterly Review, No. 419. April, 1909.


A.W. MOORE:

Pragmatism and its Critics, 1911.


A. SIDGWICK:

The Application of Logic, 1910.