This document discusses John Dewey's conception of inquiry and its relationship to Aristotle's categories of knowledge. It argues that Dewey can be understood as transforming Aristotle's rigid distinctions between theoretical knowledge (episteme), practical wisdom (phronesis), and technical knowledge (techne). For Dewey, inquiry is a process through which both practical and theoretical knowledge emerge in response to uncertain and complex real-world situations. By extending the contingency Aristotle attributes to ethics and politics to all domains, Dewey makes knowledge claims experimental and revisable based on experience. This reading positions Dewey as seeking to attune us to the world's irreducible complexity, contrary to critics who argue he oversimplifies it.
Descartes Epistemology
Research Philosophy: Epistemology
Epistemology Paper
Epistemology Vs. Theory Of Knowledge
Literature Review On Epistemology
Epistemic Issue
Essay on A Study of Epistemology
On Epistemology and Skepticism Essay
Personal Epistemology Essay
Epistemology
Epistemology In Business And Management
Examples Of Epistemology
Epistemology and Its Influences
Epistemology Paper
Personal Epistemology
Naturalized Epistemology Essays
Epistemology and Knowledge Essay
Epistemology And Belief Of Epistemology Essay
This document discusses the need for a new scientific vision that incorporates both analysis and synthesis. It argues that mainstream science relies too heavily on analytic methods that fragment reality. Some entities like organisms cannot be fully understood through fragmentation alone as they lose essential properties. A properly developed method of synthesis is needed to study emergent phenomena and understand how parts relate within complex wholes. The document claims that adopting both analytic and synthetic approaches can lead to a more integrated understanding of the world.
This document summarizes the traditional interpretation of Aristotle's views on episteme (scientific knowledge) and nous (intuitive reason) as presented in the Posterior Analytics. According to the traditional view, Aristotle defines episteme so strongly that induction alone cannot guarantee it. Thus, Aristotle posits nous as an infallible mental faculty that intuitively grasps first principles, validating the results of induction and establishing them as certain knowledge. However, some find this interpretation puzzling, as it is unclear why induction would be needed at all if nous can directly grasp principles, or how induction alone could provide the certainty required for episteme. The document aims to argue against this traditional interpretation.
This document discusses the philosophical concepts of a priori and a posteriori knowledge. It begins by explaining that a priori knowledge is derived from pure reason independent of sense experience, while a posteriori knowledge depends on empirical observations and sense experiences. It then explores ongoing debates around these concepts, including whether experience plays any role in justifying a priori beliefs and whether a priori knowledge truly exists independent of experience. The document traces the concepts back to Aristotle and discusses how prominent philosophers like Kant have further developed the distinction between a priori and a posteriori justification of knowledge.
The document discusses how argumentation can function like scientific hypothesis testing to generate reliable knowledge about topics that cannot be empirically observed or proven. It argues that placing the burden of proof on the affirmative team, by presuming the proposition is false until proven otherwise, introduces rigor to the argumentative process and allows the outcomes to be considered knowledge. The document also notes several implications this view has for current forensic practices, such as emphasizing the specific wording of the proposition over implementation plans and avoiding debates over minor differences between positions as long as the negative still opposes the proposition.
Epistemology is the branch of philosophy concerned with the nature and scope of knowledge. It questions what knowledge is and how it can be acquired, and investigates the extent to which knowledge can be obtained about different subjects. Epistemologists debate the philosophical analysis of the nature of knowledge and how it relates to concepts like truth, belief, and justification. The study of epistemology aims to improve our understanding of the basic principles and concepts involved in acquiring knowledge.
50 words for snow: constructing scientific phenomenaJohn Wilkins
The document discusses the construction of natural phenomena in science. It addresses questions around what phenomena are, how we identify them, and whether they are self-presenting, theory-based, or just patterns in data.
The key points are:
1) Phenomena are observable regularities with salient characteristics that recur under certain conditions.
2) Our observations and categories of phenomena are influenced by our theories and expectations, but we can also identify phenomena in the absence of theory.
3) Phenomena are patterns we discern in observational data based on prior experience with clear cases, but they need not be theory-based. Species are examples of phenomena.
This document provides an overview of key concepts and approaches in social science research methodologies. It discusses philosophies of science from Popper, Kuhn and Feyerabend and their views on falsification, paradigms and epistemological pluralism. It also examines debates around objectivity, the roles of values, and differences between naturalist and interpretivist approaches. Major figures discussed include Durkheim, Weber, Stanley and Wise in relation to their perspectives on the personal in research and establishing objective knowledge in the social sciences.
Descartes Epistemology
Research Philosophy: Epistemology
Epistemology Paper
Epistemology Vs. Theory Of Knowledge
Literature Review On Epistemology
Epistemic Issue
Essay on A Study of Epistemology
On Epistemology and Skepticism Essay
Personal Epistemology Essay
Epistemology
Epistemology In Business And Management
Examples Of Epistemology
Epistemology and Its Influences
Epistemology Paper
Personal Epistemology
Naturalized Epistemology Essays
Epistemology and Knowledge Essay
Epistemology And Belief Of Epistemology Essay
This document discusses the need for a new scientific vision that incorporates both analysis and synthesis. It argues that mainstream science relies too heavily on analytic methods that fragment reality. Some entities like organisms cannot be fully understood through fragmentation alone as they lose essential properties. A properly developed method of synthesis is needed to study emergent phenomena and understand how parts relate within complex wholes. The document claims that adopting both analytic and synthetic approaches can lead to a more integrated understanding of the world.
This document summarizes the traditional interpretation of Aristotle's views on episteme (scientific knowledge) and nous (intuitive reason) as presented in the Posterior Analytics. According to the traditional view, Aristotle defines episteme so strongly that induction alone cannot guarantee it. Thus, Aristotle posits nous as an infallible mental faculty that intuitively grasps first principles, validating the results of induction and establishing them as certain knowledge. However, some find this interpretation puzzling, as it is unclear why induction would be needed at all if nous can directly grasp principles, or how induction alone could provide the certainty required for episteme. The document aims to argue against this traditional interpretation.
This document discusses the philosophical concepts of a priori and a posteriori knowledge. It begins by explaining that a priori knowledge is derived from pure reason independent of sense experience, while a posteriori knowledge depends on empirical observations and sense experiences. It then explores ongoing debates around these concepts, including whether experience plays any role in justifying a priori beliefs and whether a priori knowledge truly exists independent of experience. The document traces the concepts back to Aristotle and discusses how prominent philosophers like Kant have further developed the distinction between a priori and a posteriori justification of knowledge.
The document discusses how argumentation can function like scientific hypothesis testing to generate reliable knowledge about topics that cannot be empirically observed or proven. It argues that placing the burden of proof on the affirmative team, by presuming the proposition is false until proven otherwise, introduces rigor to the argumentative process and allows the outcomes to be considered knowledge. The document also notes several implications this view has for current forensic practices, such as emphasizing the specific wording of the proposition over implementation plans and avoiding debates over minor differences between positions as long as the negative still opposes the proposition.
Epistemology is the branch of philosophy concerned with the nature and scope of knowledge. It questions what knowledge is and how it can be acquired, and investigates the extent to which knowledge can be obtained about different subjects. Epistemologists debate the philosophical analysis of the nature of knowledge and how it relates to concepts like truth, belief, and justification. The study of epistemology aims to improve our understanding of the basic principles and concepts involved in acquiring knowledge.
50 words for snow: constructing scientific phenomenaJohn Wilkins
The document discusses the construction of natural phenomena in science. It addresses questions around what phenomena are, how we identify them, and whether they are self-presenting, theory-based, or just patterns in data.
The key points are:
1) Phenomena are observable regularities with salient characteristics that recur under certain conditions.
2) Our observations and categories of phenomena are influenced by our theories and expectations, but we can also identify phenomena in the absence of theory.
3) Phenomena are patterns we discern in observational data based on prior experience with clear cases, but they need not be theory-based. Species are examples of phenomena.
This document provides an overview of key concepts and approaches in social science research methodologies. It discusses philosophies of science from Popper, Kuhn and Feyerabend and their views on falsification, paradigms and epistemological pluralism. It also examines debates around objectivity, the roles of values, and differences between naturalist and interpretivist approaches. Major figures discussed include Durkheim, Weber, Stanley and Wise in relation to their perspectives on the personal in research and establishing objective knowledge in the social sciences.
This document discusses the relationship between science and philosophy. It provides definitions of science as the study of natural phenomena through observation and experimentation with the goal of discovering general truths and laws. Philosophy is defined as the study of knowledge, reality, and ethics through reflection rather than empirical discovery. The philosophy of science examines the methods and justification of scientific claims.
The relationship between science and philosophy is examined in three ways: they can deal with different subject matters, philosophy can be an extension of science by evaluating scientific concepts and theories, or philosophy can describe realities independent of science. While science studies empirical facts, philosophy clarifies scientific language and theories. Both fields influence each other as science is not purely objective and philosophy reflects on scientific findings.
This document provides an introduction to the author's paper on objectivity in science. It begins by outlining the debate around whether objectivity exists in science. The author then defines key terms like objectivity and science. The main body discusses the problem of underdetermination, which questions objectivity by showing that multiple hypotheses can be consistent with the evidence. The author argues this problem strikes a "death blow" to the idea of objective science. They intend to later argue that using perspectives and context, an intellectual consensus can be reached that approaches objectivity, though true objectivity cannot be achieved.
Correspondence and Representation are important 'meta' concepts - yet their incommensurability aspects are revealing 'great and mighty' things which man 'knew not' of.
Incommensurability - correspondence and seeking of truthKeith Scharding
Ethics and the search for truth; bridging the conceptual gap between evolutionary thought and creation theories - presentation of the 'new metaphysics'; quantum computing and nanotechnology plus 'cosmic insights. The correspondence principle and the question of incommensurability with traditional viewpoints are referenced.
This document provides an overview of the course POLS 270: Political Theory at Hong Kong Baptist University. It introduces the instructor, Dr. Giuseppe Mario Saccone, and covers topics that will be discussed over the course, including political ideology, language, concepts, political science vs. political theory vs. political philosophy, and ideology. The summary highlights that the course will examine how language and concepts are used and contested in politics, explore the relationships and differences between political science, theory and philosophy, and discuss major political values and ideologies.
This document discusses the scientific processes of analysis and synthesis. It explains that analysis is the intellectual operation that considers parts of a whole separately, while synthesis assembles separated parts back into a unified whole. The analysis and synthesis are used together in the scientific method to decompose phenomena into parts for study, and then reintegrate the parts to gain a full understanding. These processes allow scientists to better investigate the causes of complex phenomena.
This document provides an introduction and definition of philosophy. It states that philosophy is the study of the nature and meaning of the universe through questioning, critical discussion, and argument. Philosophy examines fundamental questions about existence, knowledge, reason, mind, and ethics. It aims to understand reality as a whole in a rational and systematic way. The document also outlines some of the key branches and objectives of philosophy as a field of study.
This document summarizes an article that argues the Naturalistic Fallacy does not prohibit evolutionary approaches to ethics as is commonly believed. It begins by outlining Stephen Jay Gould's view that science can describe factual realities but not make value judgments, which he reserves for religion. However, the authors argue a deeper understanding of the Naturalistic Fallacy shows it constrains all approaches to ethics, both religious and scientific. While it prohibits deriving values directly from facts, an evolutionary understanding of human psychology and social interactions can shed light on the development of moral values. Contrary to common beliefs, the Naturalistic Fallacy conceptually allows for evolutionary ethics rather than prohibiting it.
This document discusses different conceptions of human flourishing from ancient Greek philosophers like Aristotle to modern times. It explores how human flourishing has changed as science and technology have advanced, allowing people to live more comfortably. The document also examines the scientific method and different theories about what distinguishes science, including verification theory and falsification theory. It notes that some philosophers see science as a social endeavor influenced by its cultural context.
Aristotelian Definition And The Discovery Of ArchaiEmma Burke
This passage provides an overview of Aristotle's view of definition and introduces some key concepts. It states that for Aristotle, definition proceeds from dialectically engaging one's "pre-existent knowledge" or "prouparchousa gnosis" to reveal the "arche" or essence of a being. It involves loosening oneself from preconceived categories in order to encounter the being on its own terms. The author argues that for Aristotle, definition is primarily philosophical/ontological rather than logical/scientific. The remainder of the document will interpret Aristotle's view of "prouparchousa gnosis" and how it relates to definition, and will explain how definition reveals the "arche" or essence of a being according to Aristotle
The document discusses Thomas Kuhn's work "The Structure of Scientific Revolutions" and his key concepts of paradigms, normal science, and scientific revolutions. Kuhn argued that science progresses through periods of normal science within a dominant paradigm, punctuated by scientific revolutions that result in a new paradigm taking hold. His work challenged the traditional view of science as a linear, cumulative process.
This document discusses the relationship between philosophy and science, and the role of philosophy of science. It makes three main points:
1. Philosophy of science analyzes and comments on scientific processes and results, but cannot generate new knowledge or predict future scientific advances in the way that science can.
2. Philosophy of science can offer conceptual analysis of scientific methods and ontology, as well as "claim checking" of scientific approaches, but its contributions are limited.
3. If biology and other sciences require a metaphysical foundation, then metaphysics should be treated as an explicit branch of those sciences and approached scientifically rather than by amateur philosophers.
Other means of persuasion, propaganda, & fallaciesWhat concept.docxalfred4lewis58146
Other means of persuasion, propaganda, & fallacies
What conception of the mind underlies critical reasoning? How do other means of persuasion rely on a different conception of the mind/self?
What conception of mind underlies critical reasoning?
Review slides 1 – 7 & 10 in Week 1’s power point: “What is critical reasoning anyhow?” & slides 2 & 5 in Week 3’s (Week 4 for the in-class section) power point: “What is an argument in logic?” (This is very important to doing your final essay. You may also want to review the description of the course on the syllabus).
Underlying this conception of critical reasoning is a conception of the mind that has varied somewhat in the history of Western philosophy, but tends to treat the mind as separate from the body [Descartes] and/or from the emotions [Kant], or if the emotions are taken into consideration, they are treated as subservient to the intellect [Socrates/Plato]. An exception to this “rule” is the philosopher Hume, who stated that reason is the slave of the emotions. Nietzsche can be interpreted as following in Hume’s footsteps.
Therefore, in critical reasoning, our capacity for logical thinking takes precedent over our desires, and logical non-contradiction takes precedence over efficient means to achieving our desires; appeals to “good reasons” to support our claims take precedent over appeals to emotions or to authority or to tradition.
In other words, evidence is supposed to replace even an expert’s judgment or the judgment of a tradition. This becomes tricky when an expert or authority is basing their judgment upon evidence that the rest of the public may not understand, or if any field of study has traditional ways of doing research, etc.
What does this conception of mind entail?
This conception of mind might underlie what Kant calls “enlightenment”, and it might also be part of the foundations of democratic thinking, insofar as the American and French revolutions were partly based on the idea that every individual citizen was capable of logical thought and had rational capacities, so deserved the vote.
Those who were still denied the vote, such as women or slaves, were often considered suspect in their ability to reason or think rationally.
Therefore, our conception of freedom was partly tied to the ability to think rationally, rather than to our capacity to feel pain or pleasure or to pursue our own desires.
This also involved the notion that our thinking is conscious.
Do we still believe in this same conception of mind?
Can we separate the emotions from rationality or thinking? This has been questioned by both recent neuroscientists, such as D’Amasio (who wrote a book, “Descartes’ Error”), and recent philosophers.
Should we want to separate the emotions from rationality? In what ways might emotions distort or undermine our rationality or our search for evidence, and in what ways might emotions contribute to our rationality and our search for evidence?
For instance, do.
MidTerm Exam 1Subject Differential EquationNote This e.docxARIV4
This document contains lecture materials on theory development from a course. It defines what a theory is, discusses the key components and characteristics of theories, and different forms theories can take. It also covers philosophical bases of theories and provides exercises for students to develop their own theories on a given topic.
This document discusses the philosophical concept of akratic action, or weakness of will. It defines akrasia as a trait of lacking self-control, and distinguishes this from akratic action, which is intentional action contrary to one's better judgment. The standard conception of akratic action views it as free action, but this view has been challenged. The document outlines some theoretical difficulties posed by the possibility of akratic action, including whether it is truly free or compelled. It also discusses the need to distinguish akratic action from compelled actions done without free will.
Incommensurability and Semiotic Representationguest5e9847
This document discusses various philosophical concepts related to truth, correspondence, representation, and meaning. It examines coherence theories of truth and justification, and explores ideas around value incommensurability, representation theory, and semiotics. Key topics covered include the relationship between truth and empirical proof or justification, the nature of representation and reality, and whether truth is determined solely by correspondence with the world.
This document provides an overview of argumentation theory. It discusses key components and internal structures of arguments. It also covers different approaches to argumentation in fields like communication, informal logic, law, politics, mathematics, science and psychology. Different types of arguments are examined like conversational, legal, political and mathematical. Theories of argument fields and the contributions of theorists like Toulmin are summarized. The document aims to introduce argumentation theory as the interdisciplinary study of how conclusions can be reached through logical reasoning in various contexts and disciplines.
.There are different paths to reality, they are determined by the knower, being instrumental methodological study object, epistemological axis, among others. Reality presents several faces, what is observable and what is perceived sensory empirical data obtained correspond to the visible, the main thing is to discover the hidden side, which is behind the perceptible or data. Epistemology is the whole process of obtaining scientific knowledge, ranging from the pre knowledge to get to know the hidden side, one thing is what is seen and what is not, and one that is not seen, is really it is.
Essay On Child Labor - Assignment PointMonique Carr
This summary provides the key steps to get assignment writing help from HelpWriting.net:
1. Create an account by providing a password and valid email address.
2. Complete a 10-minute order form providing instructions, sources, deadline and attaching a sample work.
3. Writers will bid on the request and the client can choose a writer based on qualifications, history and feedback, placing a deposit to start the assignment.
4. Clients can request revisions to ensure satisfaction, and HelpWriting.net promises original, high-quality content with a full refund for plagiarism.
Things To Write A Narrative Essay About. What Is A NarMonique Carr
The document provides a 5-step process for requesting writing assistance from HelpWriting.net:
1. Create an account with a password and valid email.
2. Complete a 10-minute order form providing instructions, sources, deadline, and attaching a sample for style imitation.
3. Review bids from writers for the request, choose one based on qualifications, order history, and feedback, then pay a deposit.
4. Ensure the paper meets expectations, and if so, authorize full payment. Free revisions are provided.
5. Multiple revisions can be requested to ensure satisfaction. HelpWriting.net promises original, high-quality content and refunds for plagiarism.
The document discusses the process of requesting writing assistance from the HelpWriting.net website. It outlines 5 steps: 1) Create an account with a password and email. 2) Complete a 10-minute order form providing instructions, sources, and deadline. 3) Review bids from writers and choose one based on qualifications. 4) Receive the paper and ensure it meets expectations, authorizing payment if pleased. 5) Request revisions to ensure satisfaction, with a refund option for plagiarized work. The purpose is to provide concise instructions for obtaining original, high-quality content through the website's writing assistance services.
More Related Content
Similar to Action And Inquiry In Dewey S Philosophy
This document discusses the relationship between science and philosophy. It provides definitions of science as the study of natural phenomena through observation and experimentation with the goal of discovering general truths and laws. Philosophy is defined as the study of knowledge, reality, and ethics through reflection rather than empirical discovery. The philosophy of science examines the methods and justification of scientific claims.
The relationship between science and philosophy is examined in three ways: they can deal with different subject matters, philosophy can be an extension of science by evaluating scientific concepts and theories, or philosophy can describe realities independent of science. While science studies empirical facts, philosophy clarifies scientific language and theories. Both fields influence each other as science is not purely objective and philosophy reflects on scientific findings.
This document provides an introduction to the author's paper on objectivity in science. It begins by outlining the debate around whether objectivity exists in science. The author then defines key terms like objectivity and science. The main body discusses the problem of underdetermination, which questions objectivity by showing that multiple hypotheses can be consistent with the evidence. The author argues this problem strikes a "death blow" to the idea of objective science. They intend to later argue that using perspectives and context, an intellectual consensus can be reached that approaches objectivity, though true objectivity cannot be achieved.
Correspondence and Representation are important 'meta' concepts - yet their incommensurability aspects are revealing 'great and mighty' things which man 'knew not' of.
Incommensurability - correspondence and seeking of truthKeith Scharding
Ethics and the search for truth; bridging the conceptual gap between evolutionary thought and creation theories - presentation of the 'new metaphysics'; quantum computing and nanotechnology plus 'cosmic insights. The correspondence principle and the question of incommensurability with traditional viewpoints are referenced.
This document provides an overview of the course POLS 270: Political Theory at Hong Kong Baptist University. It introduces the instructor, Dr. Giuseppe Mario Saccone, and covers topics that will be discussed over the course, including political ideology, language, concepts, political science vs. political theory vs. political philosophy, and ideology. The summary highlights that the course will examine how language and concepts are used and contested in politics, explore the relationships and differences between political science, theory and philosophy, and discuss major political values and ideologies.
This document discusses the scientific processes of analysis and synthesis. It explains that analysis is the intellectual operation that considers parts of a whole separately, while synthesis assembles separated parts back into a unified whole. The analysis and synthesis are used together in the scientific method to decompose phenomena into parts for study, and then reintegrate the parts to gain a full understanding. These processes allow scientists to better investigate the causes of complex phenomena.
This document provides an introduction and definition of philosophy. It states that philosophy is the study of the nature and meaning of the universe through questioning, critical discussion, and argument. Philosophy examines fundamental questions about existence, knowledge, reason, mind, and ethics. It aims to understand reality as a whole in a rational and systematic way. The document also outlines some of the key branches and objectives of philosophy as a field of study.
This document summarizes an article that argues the Naturalistic Fallacy does not prohibit evolutionary approaches to ethics as is commonly believed. It begins by outlining Stephen Jay Gould's view that science can describe factual realities but not make value judgments, which he reserves for religion. However, the authors argue a deeper understanding of the Naturalistic Fallacy shows it constrains all approaches to ethics, both religious and scientific. While it prohibits deriving values directly from facts, an evolutionary understanding of human psychology and social interactions can shed light on the development of moral values. Contrary to common beliefs, the Naturalistic Fallacy conceptually allows for evolutionary ethics rather than prohibiting it.
This document discusses different conceptions of human flourishing from ancient Greek philosophers like Aristotle to modern times. It explores how human flourishing has changed as science and technology have advanced, allowing people to live more comfortably. The document also examines the scientific method and different theories about what distinguishes science, including verification theory and falsification theory. It notes that some philosophers see science as a social endeavor influenced by its cultural context.
Aristotelian Definition And The Discovery Of ArchaiEmma Burke
This passage provides an overview of Aristotle's view of definition and introduces some key concepts. It states that for Aristotle, definition proceeds from dialectically engaging one's "pre-existent knowledge" or "prouparchousa gnosis" to reveal the "arche" or essence of a being. It involves loosening oneself from preconceived categories in order to encounter the being on its own terms. The author argues that for Aristotle, definition is primarily philosophical/ontological rather than logical/scientific. The remainder of the document will interpret Aristotle's view of "prouparchousa gnosis" and how it relates to definition, and will explain how definition reveals the "arche" or essence of a being according to Aristotle
The document discusses Thomas Kuhn's work "The Structure of Scientific Revolutions" and his key concepts of paradigms, normal science, and scientific revolutions. Kuhn argued that science progresses through periods of normal science within a dominant paradigm, punctuated by scientific revolutions that result in a new paradigm taking hold. His work challenged the traditional view of science as a linear, cumulative process.
This document discusses the relationship between philosophy and science, and the role of philosophy of science. It makes three main points:
1. Philosophy of science analyzes and comments on scientific processes and results, but cannot generate new knowledge or predict future scientific advances in the way that science can.
2. Philosophy of science can offer conceptual analysis of scientific methods and ontology, as well as "claim checking" of scientific approaches, but its contributions are limited.
3. If biology and other sciences require a metaphysical foundation, then metaphysics should be treated as an explicit branch of those sciences and approached scientifically rather than by amateur philosophers.
Other means of persuasion, propaganda, & fallaciesWhat concept.docxalfred4lewis58146
Other means of persuasion, propaganda, & fallacies
What conception of the mind underlies critical reasoning? How do other means of persuasion rely on a different conception of the mind/self?
What conception of mind underlies critical reasoning?
Review slides 1 – 7 & 10 in Week 1’s power point: “What is critical reasoning anyhow?” & slides 2 & 5 in Week 3’s (Week 4 for the in-class section) power point: “What is an argument in logic?” (This is very important to doing your final essay. You may also want to review the description of the course on the syllabus).
Underlying this conception of critical reasoning is a conception of the mind that has varied somewhat in the history of Western philosophy, but tends to treat the mind as separate from the body [Descartes] and/or from the emotions [Kant], or if the emotions are taken into consideration, they are treated as subservient to the intellect [Socrates/Plato]. An exception to this “rule” is the philosopher Hume, who stated that reason is the slave of the emotions. Nietzsche can be interpreted as following in Hume’s footsteps.
Therefore, in critical reasoning, our capacity for logical thinking takes precedent over our desires, and logical non-contradiction takes precedence over efficient means to achieving our desires; appeals to “good reasons” to support our claims take precedent over appeals to emotions or to authority or to tradition.
In other words, evidence is supposed to replace even an expert’s judgment or the judgment of a tradition. This becomes tricky when an expert or authority is basing their judgment upon evidence that the rest of the public may not understand, or if any field of study has traditional ways of doing research, etc.
What does this conception of mind entail?
This conception of mind might underlie what Kant calls “enlightenment”, and it might also be part of the foundations of democratic thinking, insofar as the American and French revolutions were partly based on the idea that every individual citizen was capable of logical thought and had rational capacities, so deserved the vote.
Those who were still denied the vote, such as women or slaves, were often considered suspect in their ability to reason or think rationally.
Therefore, our conception of freedom was partly tied to the ability to think rationally, rather than to our capacity to feel pain or pleasure or to pursue our own desires.
This also involved the notion that our thinking is conscious.
Do we still believe in this same conception of mind?
Can we separate the emotions from rationality or thinking? This has been questioned by both recent neuroscientists, such as D’Amasio (who wrote a book, “Descartes’ Error”), and recent philosophers.
Should we want to separate the emotions from rationality? In what ways might emotions distort or undermine our rationality or our search for evidence, and in what ways might emotions contribute to our rationality and our search for evidence?
For instance, do.
MidTerm Exam 1Subject Differential EquationNote This e.docxARIV4
This document contains lecture materials on theory development from a course. It defines what a theory is, discusses the key components and characteristics of theories, and different forms theories can take. It also covers philosophical bases of theories and provides exercises for students to develop their own theories on a given topic.
This document discusses the philosophical concept of akratic action, or weakness of will. It defines akrasia as a trait of lacking self-control, and distinguishes this from akratic action, which is intentional action contrary to one's better judgment. The standard conception of akratic action views it as free action, but this view has been challenged. The document outlines some theoretical difficulties posed by the possibility of akratic action, including whether it is truly free or compelled. It also discusses the need to distinguish akratic action from compelled actions done without free will.
Incommensurability and Semiotic Representationguest5e9847
This document discusses various philosophical concepts related to truth, correspondence, representation, and meaning. It examines coherence theories of truth and justification, and explores ideas around value incommensurability, representation theory, and semiotics. Key topics covered include the relationship between truth and empirical proof or justification, the nature of representation and reality, and whether truth is determined solely by correspondence with the world.
This document provides an overview of argumentation theory. It discusses key components and internal structures of arguments. It also covers different approaches to argumentation in fields like communication, informal logic, law, politics, mathematics, science and psychology. Different types of arguments are examined like conversational, legal, political and mathematical. Theories of argument fields and the contributions of theorists like Toulmin are summarized. The document aims to introduce argumentation theory as the interdisciplinary study of how conclusions can be reached through logical reasoning in various contexts and disciplines.
.There are different paths to reality, they are determined by the knower, being instrumental methodological study object, epistemological axis, among others. Reality presents several faces, what is observable and what is perceived sensory empirical data obtained correspond to the visible, the main thing is to discover the hidden side, which is behind the perceptible or data. Epistemology is the whole process of obtaining scientific knowledge, ranging from the pre knowledge to get to know the hidden side, one thing is what is seen and what is not, and one that is not seen, is really it is.
Similar to Action And Inquiry In Dewey S Philosophy (19)
Essay On Child Labor - Assignment PointMonique Carr
This summary provides the key steps to get assignment writing help from HelpWriting.net:
1. Create an account by providing a password and valid email address.
2. Complete a 10-minute order form providing instructions, sources, deadline and attaching a sample work.
3. Writers will bid on the request and the client can choose a writer based on qualifications, history and feedback, placing a deposit to start the assignment.
4. Clients can request revisions to ensure satisfaction, and HelpWriting.net promises original, high-quality content with a full refund for plagiarism.
Things To Write A Narrative Essay About. What Is A NarMonique Carr
The document provides a 5-step process for requesting writing assistance from HelpWriting.net:
1. Create an account with a password and valid email.
2. Complete a 10-minute order form providing instructions, sources, deadline, and attaching a sample for style imitation.
3. Review bids from writers for the request, choose one based on qualifications, order history, and feedback, then pay a deposit.
4. Ensure the paper meets expectations, and if so, authorize full payment. Free revisions are provided.
5. Multiple revisions can be requested to ensure satisfaction. HelpWriting.net promises original, high-quality content and refunds for plagiarism.
The document discusses the process of requesting writing assistance from the HelpWriting.net website. It outlines 5 steps: 1) Create an account with a password and email. 2) Complete a 10-minute order form providing instructions, sources, and deadline. 3) Review bids from writers and choose one based on qualifications. 4) Receive the paper and ensure it meets expectations, authorizing payment if pleased. 5) Request revisions to ensure satisfaction, with a refund option for plagiarized work. The purpose is to provide concise instructions for obtaining original, high-quality content through the website's writing assistance services.
Sop For Canada Student (Study Permit) Visa SamplMonique Carr
This document provides instructions for students applying for a study permit visa to Canada. It outlines a 5-step process: 1) Create an account, 2) Complete a form providing instructions, sources, and deadline, 3) Review bids from writers and choose one, 4) Review the completed paper and authorize payment, 5) Request revisions until satisfied. The purpose is to help students get assistance writing their visa application materials.
023 How To Write Memoir Essay Example NarrativeMonique Carr
The document provides an overview of Earth's history by outlining several key periods:
- The Precambrian Era lasted 4.6-541 million years ago and saw the formation of the atmosphere, oceans, and early continental masses through plate tectonics. Oxygen was produced by early animals.
- The Ordovician Period lasted around 45 million years and was dominated by oceans. Plants began invading land while animals like graptolites and trilobites flourished.
- The Devonian Period saw further diversification of plant and animal life including early reptiles and amphibians.
Upenn Supplemental Essay Help - Amp-Pinterest In ActiMonique Carr
1. The document discusses data analysis and data mining, which involves analyzing large amounts of data stored in data warehouses to discover useful patterns and relationships. This can be used to predict future behavior and provide insights.
2. Data analysis includes simple querying, statistical analysis, and more complex multidimensional analysis of data from various sources to extract useful information for managers.
3. Data mining is a subset of business intelligence that uses technologies to search large quantities of data and discover patterns, which can then be used for purposes like customer relationship management.
John Muir and William Wordsworth both describe finding happiness in nature through their writings. Muir uses vivid imagery to describe discovering a Calypso flower, showing his appreciation for nature. Wordsworth employs unique syntax to convey his joy at seeing daffodils. While their literary devices differ, both authors express how being in nature made them feel positively.
This document provides instructions for requesting writing assistance from HelpWriting.net. It outlines a 5 step process: 1) Create an account with a password and email. 2) Complete a 10-minute order form providing instructions, sources, and deadline. 3) Review bids from writers and choose one based on qualifications. 4) Receive the paper and authorize payment if satisfied. 5) Request revisions to ensure satisfaction, with a full refund option for plagiarized work. The process aims to match clients with qualified writers and provide original, high-quality content through revisions.
An Introduction to English Grammar.pdfMonique Carr
This document is the preface to the second edition of the book "An Introduction to English Grammar" by Sidney Greenbaum. It discusses minor revisions made to preserve the organization and content of the original edition, while adding a new chapter on the grammatical features of different linguistic registers based on corpus data. The exercises have also been increased and rearranged for improved learning. The preface acknowledges the original author and contributors to the first edition, and dedicates the new edition to family members.
This document provides an introduction to the sixth edition of the textbook "Airline Marketing and Management" by Stephen Shaw. The introduction expresses that while the airline industry has recovered from difficult times, many old problems remain and new issues have emerged, such as the role of aviation in climate change. As such, preparing this new edition was as interesting as prior editions. The introduction thanks those involved in the publishing and continued support of the textbook over multiple editions.
This document provides an overview of the lifelong learning sector in the UK. It describes the diversity of institutions, programs, staff, and students that make up this sector. It discusses the changing policies and standards that have influenced the sector in recent decades. The book aims to identify and explore the many factors that define the lifelong learning sector and contribute to its complexity as an educational context.
A Critique on KUMON English Curriculum.pdfMonique Carr
This critique summarizes issues with the Kumon English curriculum based on the author's experience teaching at Kumon. While the curriculum effectively develops reading skills, it focuses solely on reading comprehension and does not account for student interests. The self-learning approach does not fully adopt characteristics of student-centered learning. Additionally, content is not appropriately tailored to individual student abilities, and assessing students based on tests they can memorize does not ensure comprehension. The fast pace and lack of support for struggling students contributes to high dropout rates. Overall, the curriculum is well-designed but has feasibility issues in real classroom implementation.
Animal Experimentation as a Form of Rescue.pdfMonique Carr
This document explores analyzing animal experimentation through the framework of rescue. The author argues that animal experiments mirror rescue situations by attempting to prevent or alleviate serious human harm from disease. The author then considers various principles of rescue to see if they could morally justify animal experimentation. However, the author finds that all the proposed rescue principles are either not independently plausible or fail to imply animal experimentation is justified. The author concludes it is difficult to justify animal experimentation using a rescue framework.
AN INVESTIGATION INTO THE CAUSES AND EFFECTS OF TEACHER MISCONDUCT IN SELECTE...Monique Carr
This document is a dissertation submitted to Mzuzu University in partial fulfillment of a Master's degree in Education (Leadership and Management). The dissertation investigates the causes and effects of teacher misconduct in selected public secondary schools in Dowa District, Malawi. The study aims to explore common cases of teacher misconduct, possible causes, effects on teaching and learning, and challenges in promoting ethical conduct among teachers. Data was collected through interviews with head teachers and teachers, as well as questionnaires and document analysis. Key findings included absenteeism and late coming as common misconduct, and factors such as low job satisfaction, lack of support and cooperation as contributing to misconduct. The study also found teacher misconduct affected the teaching and learning process.
A research-based narrative assignment for global health education.pdfMonique Carr
This document describes a research-based narrative assignment implemented in an undergraduate global health course. The assignment required students (n=20) to research a global health issue and write a narrative based on their findings. Students then wrote a two-page reflection on their experience. Analysis of the reflections identified four themes: (1) the challenge of representing real people, (2) developing an engaged understanding of the issue, (3) integrating various determinants into a coherent story, and (4) struggling to create an accurate and compelling narrative. The strengths and limitations of using this assignment approach for global health education are discussed.
A Set Of Social Games For Senior Citizens With Dementia D9Monique Carr
This document summarizes the development of a set of social games called Project D9, designed for senior citizens with dementia. It involved extensive research and testing with people with dementia, caregivers, and experts over three phases. The goal was to stimulate social interaction and cognitive activity for both individuals with dementia and their caregivers. Various versions and difficulty levels of games using images, objects, and senses were tested iteratively. Feedback was used to develop visual materials, instructions, and a prototype featuring cubes with photographs that could be arranged in different ways. The project aims to reduce burden on caregivers and improve quality of life for those with dementia.
This document appears to be an introduction or overview section for a steel design handbook. It discusses the following key points in 3 sentences:
The handbook is divided into multiple parts that classify structural steel products based on manufacturing method and thickness. It provides tables of dimensions and properties to enable selection of structural members. Major revisions from a previous edition include modifying thickness ranges and adding new sections on built-up wide flange tees, metal decks, design examples, and welded joints.
A Study Of The Recruitment And Selection ProcessMonique Carr
(1) The document discusses a study of the recruitment and selection process at SMC Global Securities Ltd. It examines the company's practices and how they affect organizational outcomes.
(2) The study found that the company considers job portals and employee references as the most important recruitment methods. References from existing employees are viewed as one of the most reliable sources for hiring.
(3) In the selection process, the company always takes the cost-benefit ratio into consideration. The ratio of candidates selected to candidates ultimately joining is found to be effective.
A Next-Generation Risk Assessment Case Study For Coumarin In Cosmetic ProductsMonique Carr
This study conducted a next-generation risk assessment of 0.1% coumarin in hypothetical face cream and body lotion products without using animal data. Systemic exposure levels were estimated using a physiologically based kinetic model. Existing data on coumarin's structure, bioactivity, and metabolism were compiled. New in vitro assays characterized biological effects across pathways. However, the lack of metabolic competence in 2D cell models led to additional tests in 3D HepaRG cells and identifying metabolites in hepatocytes. Points of departure from all data were compared to exposure levels to calculate a margin of safety for the risk assessment decision. This demonstrated an integrated approach using multiple new approach methodologies.
A Program Evaluation Of Fundations In A Private Urban Elementary SchoolMonique Carr
This document describes a program evaluation of the Fundations reading program implemented at a private urban elementary school. The evaluation aims to assess program fidelity and examine changes in student reading performance since adopting Fundations. Data sources include Fundations implementation checklists, student running records assessments, and a teacher survey. The evaluation seeks to address questions about fidelity of implementation, changes in student reading scores over time, and teacher perceptions of program strengths and needs for support.
How to Setup Warehouse & Location in Odoo 17 InventoryCeline George
In this slide, we'll explore how to set up warehouses and locations in Odoo 17 Inventory. This will help us manage our stock effectively, track inventory levels, and streamline warehouse operations.
বাংলাদেশের অর্থনৈতিক সমীক্ষা ২০২৪ [Bangladesh Economic Review 2024 Bangla.pdf] কম্পিউটার , ট্যাব ও স্মার্ট ফোন ভার্সন সহ সম্পূর্ণ বাংলা ই-বুক বা pdf বই " সুচিপত্র ...বুকমার্ক মেনু 🔖 ও হাইপার লিংক মেনু 📝👆 যুক্ত ..
আমাদের সবার জন্য খুব খুব গুরুত্বপূর্ণ একটি বই ..বিসিএস, ব্যাংক, ইউনিভার্সিটি ভর্তি ও যে কোন প্রতিযোগিতা মূলক পরীক্ষার জন্য এর খুব ইম্পরট্যান্ট একটি বিষয় ...তাছাড়া বাংলাদেশের সাম্প্রতিক যে কোন ডাটা বা তথ্য এই বইতে পাবেন ...
তাই একজন নাগরিক হিসাবে এই তথ্য গুলো আপনার জানা প্রয়োজন ...।
বিসিএস ও ব্যাংক এর লিখিত পরীক্ষা ...+এছাড়া মাধ্যমিক ও উচ্চমাধ্যমিকের স্টুডেন্টদের জন্য অনেক কাজে আসবে ...
Philippine Edukasyong Pantahanan at Pangkabuhayan (EPP) CurriculumMJDuyan
(𝐓𝐋𝐄 𝟏𝟎𝟎) (𝐋𝐞𝐬𝐬𝐨𝐧 𝟏)-𝐏𝐫𝐞𝐥𝐢𝐦𝐬
𝐃𝐢𝐬𝐜𝐮𝐬𝐬 𝐭𝐡𝐞 𝐄𝐏𝐏 𝐂𝐮𝐫𝐫𝐢𝐜𝐮𝐥𝐮𝐦 𝐢𝐧 𝐭𝐡𝐞 𝐏𝐡𝐢𝐥𝐢𝐩𝐩𝐢𝐧𝐞𝐬:
- Understand the goals and objectives of the Edukasyong Pantahanan at Pangkabuhayan (EPP) curriculum, recognizing its importance in fostering practical life skills and values among students. Students will also be able to identify the key components and subjects covered, such as agriculture, home economics, industrial arts, and information and communication technology.
𝐄𝐱𝐩𝐥𝐚𝐢𝐧 𝐭𝐡𝐞 𝐍𝐚𝐭𝐮𝐫𝐞 𝐚𝐧𝐝 𝐒𝐜𝐨𝐩𝐞 𝐨𝐟 𝐚𝐧 𝐄𝐧𝐭𝐫𝐞𝐩𝐫𝐞𝐧𝐞𝐮𝐫:
-Define entrepreneurship, distinguishing it from general business activities by emphasizing its focus on innovation, risk-taking, and value creation. Students will describe the characteristics and traits of successful entrepreneurs, including their roles and responsibilities, and discuss the broader economic and social impacts of entrepreneurial activities on both local and global scales.
Beyond Degrees - Empowering the Workforce in the Context of Skills-First.pptxEduSkills OECD
Iván Bornacelly, Policy Analyst at the OECD Centre for Skills, OECD, presents at the webinar 'Tackling job market gaps with a skills-first approach' on 12 June 2024
Strategies for Effective Upskilling is a presentation by Chinwendu Peace in a Your Skill Boost Masterclass organisation by the Excellence Foundation for South Sudan on 08th and 09th June 2024 from 1 PM to 3 PM on each day.
Main Java[All of the Base Concepts}.docxadhitya5119
This is part 1 of my Java Learning Journey. This Contains Custom methods, classes, constructors, packages, multithreading , try- catch block, finally block and more.
How to Make a Field Mandatory in Odoo 17Celine George
In Odoo, making a field required can be done through both Python code and XML views. When you set the required attribute to True in Python code, it makes the field required across all views where it's used. Conversely, when you set the required attribute in XML views, it makes the field required only in the context of that particular view.
ISO/IEC 27001, ISO/IEC 42001, and GDPR: Best Practices for Implementation and...PECB
Denis is a dynamic and results-driven Chief Information Officer (CIO) with a distinguished career spanning information systems analysis and technical project management. With a proven track record of spearheading the design and delivery of cutting-edge Information Management solutions, he has consistently elevated business operations, streamlined reporting functions, and maximized process efficiency.
Certified as an ISO/IEC 27001: Information Security Management Systems (ISMS) Lead Implementer, Data Protection Officer, and Cyber Risks Analyst, Denis brings a heightened focus on data security, privacy, and cyber resilience to every endeavor.
His expertise extends across a diverse spectrum of reporting, database, and web development applications, underpinned by an exceptional grasp of data storage and virtualization technologies. His proficiency in application testing, database administration, and data cleansing ensures seamless execution of complex projects.
What sets Denis apart is his comprehensive understanding of Business and Systems Analysis technologies, honed through involvement in all phases of the Software Development Lifecycle (SDLC). From meticulous requirements gathering to precise analysis, innovative design, rigorous development, thorough testing, and successful implementation, he has consistently delivered exceptional results.
Throughout his career, he has taken on multifaceted roles, from leading technical project management teams to owning solutions that drive operational excellence. His conscientious and proactive approach is unwavering, whether he is working independently or collaboratively within a team. His ability to connect with colleagues on a personal level underscores his commitment to fostering a harmonious and productive workplace environment.
Date: May 29, 2024
Tags: Information Security, ISO/IEC 27001, ISO/IEC 42001, Artificial Intelligence, GDPR
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Find out more about ISO training and certification services
Training: ISO/IEC 27001 Information Security Management System - EN | PECB
ISO/IEC 42001 Artificial Intelligence Management System - EN | PECB
General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) - Training Courses - EN | PECB
Webinars: https://pecb.com/webinars
Article: https://pecb.com/article
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
For more information about PECB:
Website: https://pecb.com/
LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/pecb/
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/PECBInternational/
Slideshare: http://www.slideshare.net/PECBCERTIFICATION
3. West) and as encouraging self-assertion over and against humility (à la
Reinhold Niebuhr, John Patrick Diggins, and Patrick Deneen).3 There
are subtle differences among these thinkers to be sure, but their claims
are nonetheless underwritten by a singular worry: Dewey’s conception
of inquiry is based on an ontology that orients the self to the world in
such a way that denies the fragility of life that a thorough-going exper-
imentalism demands.
The primary target of these criticisms is Dewey’s project of social
engineering. There is a substantial body of literature that addresses
these worries by elucidating his pragmatist account of science, social
science, and technology and their connection to his moral and political
philosophy.4 In doing so, defenders of his work reveal Dewey to be a
more careful and circumspect reformer than his critics would allow—
a circumspection that is fundamentally bound up with his account of
inquiry. We can strengthen this defense, I argue, by focusing more
explicitly on the ontological underpinnings of Dewey’s theory of
inquiry as revealed in what I refer to as his philosophy of action. That
is to say, the accuracy of the criticisms is partly addressed by the empha-
sis Dewey accords contingency in his philosophy of action, and the pre-
cise relationship between that account and what he says about inquiry.
This approach permits me to ally myself with those that focus on the
chastened character of his reformism by elucidating the ontology upon
which it is based.5 To put the matter differently, instead of directing our
attention to the front-end of his social philosophy, I seek to explicate
the back-end of that philosophy.6
To make good on the larger claims above, I argue that the complex-
ities of Dewey’s account of inquiry emerges if we read it as a transfor-
mation of Aristotle’s categories of knowledge: epistèmè (scientific
knowledge), phronèsis (practical wisdom), and technè (technical knowl-
edge). This claim will seem strikingly odd to anyone with a cursory
understanding of Dewey. After all, among all the ancient thinkers, it is
Aristotle to whom Dewey often directs his harshest criticism. But to
rest here, I argue, obscures the fact that Aristotle’s formal categories of
knowledge best capture the internal complexity of what inquiry
attempts to track in experience, and the epistemic status we as agents
can accord the knowledge that inquiry produces. By way of hermeneu-
tic imposition, we can extrapolate from Dewey’s texts against the back-
drop of Aristotelian categories to caste into relief the originality and
subtlety of the former.7
Proceeding this way, allows us to see that integral to Dewey’s philos-
ophy is the claim that inquiry is a process by which practical as well as
theoretical knowledge emerges. For Aristotle, this account would
undoubtedly present a problem precisely because theoretical activity
(theoria) produces a kind of knowledge that is universal and unchange-
able (epistèmè).8 Practical wisdom, however, is a capacity to act, rather
Action
and
Inquiry
in
Dewey’s
Philosophy
•
Melvin
L.
Rogers
91
4. than a kind of knowledge; it requires more than the application of uni-
versals to particulars, but the ability to understand, discern, appraise,
and manage the complexities of specific situations. Yet for Dewey,
knowledge claims are experimental at their core, the result of which
makes them fallible and revisable in the context of experience.
What, then, is the difference between the two thinkers that partly
explains the approach pursued here? In a striking passage from Experi-
ence and Nature (1925), Dewey provides the answer with reference to
Aristotle: “Aristotle perhaps came the nearest to a start in [the direction
of naturalism]. But his thought did not go far on the road, though it
may be used to suggest the road which he failed to take. Aristotle acknowl-
edges contingency, but he never surrenders his bias in favor of the fixed,
certain and finished” (LW 1: EN, 47 [emphasis added]).9 The kind of
contingency Aristotle attributes to ethical and political life, I maintain,
Dewey extends to all domains of action. Although he emphasizes the
procedural structure of inquiry, he intends much more. His aim is to
underscore that when we say a person (e.g., scientist, craftsman, or cit-
izen) displays wisdom, we are reading their judgments within a com-
plex horizon, whose success as judgments require alertness, cultivation
of perception and imagination, and discernment of salient features in
response to a demanding environment. Contrary to the claim that
Dewey simplifies the landscape, he seeks to make us aware of the
world’s irreducible complexity.
In part one, I deal with the relationship between Aristotle’s distinc-
tions and what Dewey has in mind when he discusses inquiry. My point
here is to show that we can read Dewey as disrupting the ontological
rigidity upon which Aristotle bases his distinctions.This allows Dewey to
broaden the status of what Aristotle calls practical wisdom beyond the
ethical and political realm in which he locates it exclusively. In the second
part, I deepen my analysis by showing the importance of contingency to
Dewey’s philosophy of action and knowledge formation, which he distills
from Charles Darwin’s biological framework. This is how he gets us fur-
ther down the road suggested by Aristotle, thus acknowledging the per-
vasiveness of uncertainty. In his seminal 1896 article, “The Reflex Arc
Concept in Psychology,” Dewey clearly announces his organic view of
experience (EW 5: RA, 96–109). But it is with his appeal to Darwin’s
biological model in his 1910 essay, “The Influence of Darwin on Philos-
ophy,” that Dewey highlights the way in which contingency infuses the
social and natural world, potentially defying human mastery and control.
As a result, the structure of action, I argue in the third part, places
demands on agents’ cognitive resources (i.e. inquiry) such that they must
be sensitive to and perceptive of the particularity of the situation in which
they operate in order to make an informed judgment of action.
But does this approach add value? Does it deepen our understand-
ing of Dewey? After all, the emphasis on contingency as distilled from
T
R
A
N
S
A
C
T
I
O
N
S
92
5. Dewey’s interpretation of Darwin is not new. We find the claim
expressed in several works, most notably, Raymond D. Boisvert’s
Dewey’s Metaphysics, James Campbell’s Understanding John Dewey, and
John Shook’s Dewey’s Empirical Theory of Knowledge and Reality.10 Yet,
even in these works, attention is focused on inquiry’s aim and not the
background domain of action from which it flows and to which it must
return for assessment. Shifting our attention to the latter holds in view
the potential success as well as failure of inquiry. This essay, then, does
not radically depart from these thinkers above, but seeks to crystallize
more explicitly than they have done Dewey’s philosophy of action so
that his talk of human progress (which I do not deny) is consistently
understood as a claim about historical possibility rather than ontologi-
cal fact. Above all else, it is this observation, which, in Dewey’s view,
prompts human intervention even as it recommends humility.
I
In book VI of the Nicomachean Ethics, Aristotle lays out the differences
among epistèmè, phronèsis, and technè. These refer to the determinant
character of understanding associated with scientific action (theoria),
ethical and political life (praxis), and artistic or technical production
(poie m
sis).11 Since I have already described the first in the introduction,
we can focus on the other two categories. For Aristotle, phronèsis and
the capacity for judgment denote a performative quality of practical
action, while technè signifies a qualitative evaluation of action based on
its productive results.12 To say that phronèsis is displayed in practical
action means for Aristotle that it is inseparable from the person who
displays it—that is, it cannot be distilled as a formula to be learned,
used, and appropriated in the same way the craftsman or expert teaches
his trade. This is because phronèsis belongs to the ethical and political
practices relating to human goods that admit of change and variation.13
He is clear that these correspond to ontological distinctions and are not
merely descriptive features of one account of action.14
For Dewey, to locate inquiry against the backdrop of contingency
foregrounds the pressures under which living well takes place—the
extent to which humans are, as he says, always both agents and patients
(MW 10: NRP, 10). With this claim, we find a point of positive con-
tact between Dewey and Aristotle: action denotes a kind of intelligence
that is constitutive of the agent. Individuals display a form of wisdom
in their judgments throughout life that make them an object of respect.
His understanding of the proper functioning of inquiry in any given
case can thus be read as including Aristotle’s account of phronèsis. What
needs to be observed, however, is that while Aristotle confines phronèsis
to moral and political deliberation, in Dewey’s view, the necessity of
wisdom is part of the fundamental character of human action in toto.
The entire process of inquiry, for instance, makes the agent attuned to
Action
and
Inquiry
in
Dewey’s
Philosophy
•
Melvin
L.
Rogers
93
6. the uniqueness of the situation and potential disruptions. We might
call this inquiry’s internal good; the agent becomes sensitive to the com-
plexities of and uncertainties within situations that demand a response.
But to speak of this as constituting the total picture is inaccurate in
Dewey’s view. Here, his outlook departs from the ontological claim
upon which Aristotle bases his distinctions in at least three ways. First,
inquiry’s internal good is realized through the productive dimension of
action. That is to say, inquiry is always enacted with an end-in-view:
“[I]ntelligence develops within the sphere of action for the sake of pos-
sibilities not yet given” (MW 10: NRP, 14; cf. MW 8: LJP, 48). Inquiry
thus realizes goods that are external. The result is that Dewey, in Aris-
totle’s language, collapses the rigid distinction between phronèsis and
technè. The efficacy of one’s actions is what justifies identifying the per-
son as possessing practical wisdom.
Second, Dewey believes that this point above applies to all domains
of human endeavor: science, art and craftsmanship, and moral and
political reflection. For him, a person’s readiness for and sensitivity to
pressures that affect the context of concern bears fruit in experience. It
would be odd in his view to speak of someone, whether the person was
a scientist, politician or craftsman, as successfully engaging in inquiry,
if they consistently made bad choices, were subject to constant misfor-
tune in their projects, or unable to successfully conduct experiments
that had fruitful results. We would begin to make judgments about
their character, their intellectual abilities, and insensitivity to the com-
plexities of the situations in which they find themselves.15
This brings me to the third point. Continuity between action and
production is the origination of knowledge, which, in turn provides
points of departure for future encounters with an uncertain world that
either reaffirms that knowledge or throws it into question. Here, we
should note a point that we will consider more closely in the next section.
Dewey is taking his cue from the late nineteenth-century science of
human development with its reliance on probability.The Darwinian par-
adigm is the framework in which he works. As Robert Brandom remarks,
this framework emphasizes “situated narratives of local, contingent, and
mutable . . . reciprocal accommodations of particular creatures and habi-
tats” in which the expected is coeval with the unexpected.16 The result is
that Dewey allows us to employ the notion of phronèsis and to fore-
ground, as I argue in §II, practical action’s experimental core in a more
expansive way than Aristotle.
Of course, Dewey concedes that the knowledge of the craftsman or
physical scientists is often “more precise and more technical” in con-
trast to the complexity and imprecision of knowledge associated with
ethical and political life (LW 4: QC, 158). But this is not an ontologi-
cal difference. As he points out, the “object of specifically physical
knowledge is the same thing as being an object of operations that dis-
T
R
A
N
S
A
C
T
I
O
N
S
94
7. criminate definitely fundamental relations of the experienced world
from others, and that deal with them in their discriminated character”
for engaging other aspects of the world (LW 4: QC, 158).17 “The
objects thus known,” he contends, “lay no claim to be final. When used
as factors for inquiring into phenomena of life and society they become
instrumental” (LW 4: QC, 158). He thus assimilates epistèmè to phronè-
sis, transforming knowledge once thought certain and unassailable into
knowledge that is fallible.
Dewey’s underlying claim is that experience constitutes the begin-
ning and terminal points for both the “normative” and “empirical” sci-
ences, giving the actions of both a logical form and experimental
character in which explanation and defense can be provided.18 What
hypothesis we should endorse or ideal we should follow equally unfolds
against the background of past experiences and future expectations rel-
ative to a specific problem. The validity of the hypothesis is no clearer
before action than the normative ideal, and so both must be tested by
way of action. The difference lies not in the operations responsible for
the emergence of knowledge, but rather in the scope of such knowl-
edge: “The more complex the conditions with which operations are
concerned . . . the more significant . . . is the resulting knowledge” (LW
4: QC, 159).
Dewey does not deny that we can still speak of technical or scientific
knowledge, thus marking off the distinctions between art and science
for functional purposes (MW 4: QC, 159). His point is that the acqui-
sition of such knowledge is not qualitatively distinct from the knowl-
edge of ethical and political life. All share the same logical structure that
leads to their acquisition, testing with regard to their possibility, and
maintenance. We would want the agent of inquiry, the craftsman, and
the scientist to be capable of responding to the vicissitudes of life that
confront them in their respective domains. This allows us to say when
they are successful that they have skill or knack for making good judg-
ments. We long to be the apprentice or use them as models of good
conduct, with the hopes that something of what they have might “rub
off” on us. But before addressing the internal dynamism of inquiry in
§III which this claim suggests, we need to understand the precise rela-
tionship between contingency and action.
II
In “The Influence of Darwin on Philosophy,” Darwin helps Dewey dis-
pense with permanence as the primary category in which to think
about the human species, and simultaneously foregrounds the world of
practical action as the primary locus for where knowledge is meaning-
fully possible. Darwin provides him with a model that accentuates both
the creative and contingent dimension of practical action. Here, exper-
imentalism emerges at the nexus where contingency and practical
Action
and
Inquiry
in
Dewey’s
Philosophy
•
Melvin
L.
Rogers
95
8. action meet (LW 4: QC, chap. 4). Dewey signals this in the Darwin
essay, but develops it more fully in some of his principal writings after
1910—Democracy and Education (1916), “The Need for a Recovery of
Philosophy” (1917), Reconstruction in Philosophy (1920), Human
Nature and Conduct (1922), and his famous Gifford Lectures, The
Quest for Certainty (1929).
In the essay, Dewey explicates Darwin’s contribution to our under-
standing of species development: “If all organic adaptations are due
simply to constant variation and the elimination of those variations
which are harmful in the struggle for existence that is brought by exces-
sive reproducing, there is no call for a prior intelligent causal force to
plan and preordain them” (MW 4: IDP, 9). His point here is straight-
forward. Darwin’s empirical work indicates that the generative struc-
ture of species’ development is located in varying and unpredictable
pressures on existence resulting from the external environment.19 This
shifts attention away from belief in some prior directive force in or out-
side of nature that has dominated much of Western philosophic and
religious thought. Instead, the biological paradigm indicates that since
we encounter nature in experience, direction—that is, ways of and the-
ories about coping, dealing, enduring, and surviving—emerges out of
that transaction.
The impact is threefold. First, the conception of knowledge derived
from a fix notion of the species falls away. Philosophic and scientific
investigation, Dewey argues, “forswears inquiry after absolute origins
and absolute finalities in order to explore specific values and the specific
conditions that generate them” (MW 4: IDP, 10). Knowledge comes to
fruition within experience understood as an “affair of the intercourse of
a living being with its physical and social environment” (MW 10: NRP,
23). In short, knowledge is emergent.
Dewey treats experience as a potential experimental domain, the
result of which defines the ends of science, ethics, and political life in
probabilistic terms. For him, this redescribes our expectations regarding
inquiry by abandoning the quest for certainty in favor of security (LW 4:
QC, chaps. 8 and 10). We are thus poised to become more reflective vis-
à-vis traditionally sacred hierarchies or political arrangements, exposing
them to potential reconsideration and alteration.This description makes
his account a descendent of Aristotelian naturalism—but with a dif-
ference attributable to the more thorough-going experimentalism of
Dewey’s scientific milieu. The relevant line of descent, as indicated by
the passage quoted earlier from Experience and Nature, is marked by
Aristotle’s sensitivity to contingency in relation to ethical life. But when
Aristotle says of ethical life that “we must be content, then, in speaking
of such subjects and with such premises to indicate the truth roughly
and in outline, and in speaking about things which are only for the most
part true,”20 we can read Dewey as extending this caution to all domains
T
R
A
N
S
A
C
T
I
O
N
S
96
9. of human action (LW 4: QC, 5–6). For him, in all human endeavors
theories are not an exemplification of first principles, but suggestions to
be tested as practical guides in future action.
Second, inquiry no longer sets itself up to prove that “life must have
certain qualities and values—no matter how experience presents the
matter—because of some remote cause and eventual goal” (MW 4:
IDP, 12 [original emphasis]). What Dewey means here is that the
meaningfulness of life does not hang on a logical argument of causal
antecedents in which determinate values are identified. As such, human
investigation can orient itself positively to the plurality of life, taking
this as a starting point for yielding values that sustain and direct human
conduct. For him, the conditions of modernity mean that we have tran-
sitioned from customary to reflective morality where the latter is
defined by the formation of competing values, and the necessity of dis-
covering how and if they can be successfully incorporated into the larger
moral and political economy of society (LW 7: E, chap. 10).21
Third, the biological paradigm introduces responsibility, deter-
mined by how well the agent locates and interprets “the more serious of
the conflicts that occur in life” and offer “ways for dealing with them”
and accepting the consequences which follow (MW 4: IDP, 13; cf. MW
9: DE, 153). Inquiry is thus prospective and experimental rather than
retrospective and submissive. It constitutes “a method of . . . diagnosis
and prognosis” that rejects ontological distinctions between the empir-
ical and normative realms (MW 4: IDP, 13). That it introduces respon-
sibility among agents is to say with Eric MacGilvray, that the “appeal to
experimental intelligence is egalitarian in the sense that all may reason-
ably be thought capable of developing this faculty more fully and prof-
iting thereby.”22
What, then, is the precise character of this experimentalist response
to uncertainty? We risk obscuring the role Dewey attributes to inquiry,
if we do not attend carefully to what he means in connecting contin-
gency to action. Cornel West, for example, misrepresents the matter
when he argues that Dewey does not maintain a “delicate balance
between excessive optimism and exorbitant pessimism regarding human
capacities.”23 Raymond Boisvert adds to West’s mischaracterization
when he suggests that “sensitivity to inherent natural limitations is
decidedly underemphasized” in Dewey’s work.24 But how can West and
Boisvert—sympathetic interpreters—make such claims? This is espe-
cially noteworthy considering the latter’s treatment of Darwin’s impor-
tance to Dewey.25 Essentially, what they argue is that inquiry
presupposes a description of the relationship between action and the
environment (broadly conceived), which obscures the uncertainty that
connection involves.26 In their view, contingency does not run deep
enough. As we shall see in a moment, however, Dewey’s account of
inquiry takes on the shape that it does precisely because contingency
Action
and
Inquiry
in
Dewey’s
Philosophy
•
Melvin
L.
Rogers
97
10. frames human action from the outset. This requires us to place inquiry
in the background for a moment and focus our attention only on
Dewey’s phenomenology of action—that is, its function in constituting
the self, its temporal quality, and the pressures it generates.
In linking the world of action to uncertainty, Dewey refers to some-
thing very specific about our relationship to the environment. Action
in this instance does not mean the commonsensical notion of move-
ment or series of movements. That action is this for Dewey cannot be
denied, but action is more like organized activity to achieve ends, the
necessity of which is set by the pressures of the environment. Hence the
examples he offers of the world of practical activity: “Man constructs a
fortress out of the very conditions and forces which threaten him. He
builds shelters, weaves garments, makes flame his friend instead of his
enemy, and [this] grows into the complicated arts of associated living”
(LW 4: QC, 3; cf. MW 9: DE, 146). The relationship between action
and uncertainty reveals the self-reflective character of identity. In other
words, human beings find themselves located within problematic envi-
ronments and the potential corrective to those situations are partly
dependent on how those individuals respond.
There is, however, another revelatory dimension to action. This
refers to the intentionality of consciousness as realized through action
that orients the self to the larger context (e.g., nature, other individuals,
and social arrangements). The self is not focused on its needfulness, but
the problematic situation that generated the need from the outset.
Action thus discloses to us a world that is unfinished, in the process of
becoming, and which demands a response. The “stimulus to thinking
. . . implies that the situation as it stands is, either in fact or to us,
incomplete and hence indeterminate” (MW 9: DE, 158). An uncertain
world thus impinges on and provokes the self, bringing action into exis-
tence. The dual dimension of action exposes the self and creates space
for commendation and condemnation or critique and affirmation by
other subjects. In doing so, action also opens up the possibility for
uncertainty to materialize. As such, we do not know how the world will
respond to us, both in its natural movement and in the reactions by
others that inhabit the world. The uncertainty implied by the presence
of other human beings is what Dewey has in mind when he refers to the
complicated arts of associated living.
Dewey’s claim is that we do not think about being creatures of action,
constructing ways of managing and navigating our environment.
Rather, this is simply what we are in a primordial sense. “We are,” he
says, “active beings from the start and are naturally, wholly apart from
consciousness, engaged in redirecting our action in response to changes
in our surroundings” (MW 8: LJP, 52n16). In this respect action dis-
closes the contours of reality and commitments of our agency. This
claim rejects the Cartesian thinking subject as the appropriate beginning
T
R
A
N
S
A
C
T
I
O
N
S
98
11. point of analysis because this thinking subject is prefigured and consti-
tuted by specific problems. Nor does this account embrace a kind of
romantic notion of the sovereign self, since the reflexive dimension of
action bespeaks our sustained dependence on the external world.
At this juncture, critics often emphasize the progressive view of
Dewey’s account, arguing that embedded in his view is the assumption
of a world open to human intervention, waiting to be bent and altered
to human desire. As John Patrick Diggins maintains: “Although Dewey
has been hailed for ridding philosophy of epistemology in order to
bring it into the modern world . . . he appears to be returning to the
eighteenth-century French Enlightenment in his conviction of a
rational world responsive to scientific manipulation.”27 The implica-
tion is that the obstacles to human intervention for Dewey have noth-
ing to do with the world as such—that is, the impediments do not
inhere in the subject matter.
But we move too quickly if we ignore the subtlety of Dewey’s claim
and its underlying realism. Of course his philosophy of action is coex-
tensive with a theoretical framework that is reformist in orientation.
But progress is a socio-scientific possibility not an ontological fact. This
allows Dewey to say of modernity, “for the first time in history
mankind is in command of the possibility of progress” (MW 10: P,
237). Yet he retains, without contradiction or subterfuge, the caution-
ary note at the heart of his philosophy—namely, that a thorough-going
experimentalism “is not an insurance device nor a mechanical antisep-
tic . . . it inspires the mind with courage and vitality to create new ideals
and values in the face of the perplexities of a new world” (LW 1: EN, 4;
cf. MW 14: HNC, 163).28 In his view, if action allows the self to con-
trol and understand the world, to disclose the possibility within life and
potentiality of one’s life, then action can equally make clear and deepen
the contingent dimension of human projects.
In this account, there is a priority of action to the creation of char-
acter for Dewey. As he says in Human Nature and Conduct, character is
formed through and constituted by habituation: “For it makes us see
that character is the name given to the working interaction of habits . . .”
(MW 14: HNC, 31). Indeed, he argues that upon honest reflection,
we realize that “habit has this power [that is, disposes us to act in cer-
tain ways] because it is so intimately a part of ourselves. It has a hold
upon us because we are the habit” (MW 14: HNC, 21). When some-
one says of another, ‘I know his character,’ what is known is the way in
which a configuration of habits disposes him to act. Or, when we say of
a person that ‘she is not acting like herself,’ we are able to utter and
make sense of this claim because of our capacity to connect dynamic
actions across a temporal landscape to say something consistently about
who she understands herself to be, and the ways in which she can be
expected to act in light of certain situations. What this means for
Action
and
Inquiry
in
Dewey’s
Philosophy
•
Melvin
L.
Rogers
99
12. Dewey is that the assessment of an individual’s character is intelligible
through action (MW 14: HNC, 31; cf. LW 1: EN, 213).
There is interdependency then between action and character in that
the former helps constitute the latter, which in turn allows individuals to
transform the world they engage. “[S]ince habits,” writes Dewey, “involve
the support of environing conditions, a society or some specific group of
fellow-men, is always accessory before and after the fact. Some activity
proceeds from a man; then it sets up reactions in the surroundings” (MW
14: HNC, 16). For this reason Dewey says in his Ethics (1932) that “there
is no such thing as a fixed, ready-made, finished self. Every living self
causes acts and is itself caused in return by what it does” (LW 7: E, 306).
We cannot tell a story about the identity of agents and ourselves without
reference to the context in which individuals find themselves.29 Our
identity comes into view in relation to a past that we do not make and a
future that we do not completely control. This simply means that the
social world forms a temporal-spatial horizon; it embodies funded expe-
riences that extend around the self both in time and space. The social
world exists before and after the fact in the sense implied by intersubjec-
tivity through which institutional structures, linguistic and visual sym-
bols and their meaning-content emerge.
We must be careful here. To say that these two, action and character,
are interdependent must not be taken to mean, for Dewey, that they are
completely equal. “Personality,” he writes, “selfhood, subjectivity are
eventual functions that emerge with complexly organized interactions.”
“Subjectivity,” Dewey says more precisely, is thus “a novel reconstruc-
tion of a pre-existing order” (LW 1: EN, 162; cf. 168, 170–71, 187–
88). His point is that character, that which differentiates individuals, is
emergent during breaks in what is otherwise the continuous connec-
tion between self and its context. These reflections are critically impor-
tant largely because they explain his belief that the world of practical
action has a normative dimension that both regulates and liberates.
Practical action regulates in the sense captured by the habitual dimen-
sion of identity, which, although flexible, nonetheless narrows and
steadies the self—a self about which claims can be made, fulfillment of
commitments can be demanded, and to which obligations can be owed
and settled.
Precisely because action is revelatory it implies a condition of possi-
bilities that may attend specific situations. Following William James,
Dewey notes that experience is “a double-barreled word . . . in that it rec-
ognizes in its primary integrity no division between act and material,
subject and object but contains them both in an unanalyzed totality”
(LW 1: EN, 18).30 But what does this claim mean? On the one hand, it
means that for Dewey we are not fundamentally creatures of thought.
This does not mean that reflection has never taken place, but rather that
habits sediment after having been formed through a process of reason-
T
R
A
N
S
A
C
T
I
O
N
S
100
13. ing in context.They appear pre-reflective, as simply part of the narratives
in which we are implicated and to which we adhere by virtue of the
choices we continually make. To say, on the other hand, that experience
is an unanalyzed totality means that there are distinct moments of reflec-
tion in which action emerges in relationship to the temporal horizon
that makes the experience of agents purposive, meaningful and an object
of knowledge.The self is poised in an immediate way in the needful pres-
ent between a past that provides resources (i.e., sedimented habits) dis-
cordant with the present, and a future in which the present event may be
settled. The self takes cognitive control to determine and propose some
possibilities, while interpreting and avoiding others within the very tem-
poral field that indicates the problem in the first instance.
There is a fundamental point here rarely acknowledged about
Dewey’s philosophy. His account of action should be read as also mak-
ing a phenomenological claim that our cognitive capacities do not
inherently grasp the complex and elusive dimensions of the experiences
they engage. In a critically important passage in Experience and Nature,
one which has parallels elsewhere in his work, Dewey describes the elu-
sive character of the natural and social world: “The visible is set in the
invisible; and in the end what is unseen decides what happens in the
seen; the tangible rests precariously upon the untouched and
ungrasped” (LW 1: EN, 44; cf. MW 14: HNC, 145; LW 4: QC, 6).
One crucial claim of that entire work is that uncertainty saturates the
natural and social world and so frames the relative security we enjoy.
The point here is that the troubling experiences to which human
action responds are potentially resistant to mastery. Of course, this is a
crucial insight that has considerable value for understanding not only
political and ethical life, but also scientific activity. Indeed, many have
exploited this insight, from Aristotle to Machiavelli to Hannah Arendt,
in thinking about political action. But for Dewey it does more, the sub-
stance of which goes to the very heart of our self-understanding. It indi-
cates an appropriate psychology of expectation when one acts. Hence,
he says that the position of the practical actor is that of the meliorist:
“[T]he belief that the specific conditions which exist at one moment,
be they comparatively bad or comparatively good, in any event may be
bettered” (MW 12: RIP, 181–82). The auxiliary verb “may” in this for-
mulation denotes caution. We cannot be certain of the effects of our
proposals, hypotheses, and norms of conduct until they have played
themselves out. “For in acting, we put the world in peril and no one can
wholly predict what will emerge in its place” (LW 1: EN, 172). Unpre-
dictability is at once a presupposition for action that settles needs,
demands, and problems, but equally places us in a position where we
court adverse consequences.
Here we come to yet another claim rarely noticed about Dewey’s
outlook. If the term “adverse consequences” is to do justice to what
Action
and
Inquiry
in
Dewey’s
Philosophy
•
Melvin
L.
Rogers
101
14. Dewey means, it must denote the multi-faceted composition of the
natural world (including the agent) that may undermine action. To
identify the agent as a potential embodiment of contingency follows
from Dewey’s claim that our character is expressed via decision-making.
The self potentially becomes an obstacle to the settlement of the issue
to the extent that “a desirable trait of character does not always produce
desirable results” (MW 14: HNC, 36). We are reminded of those
unfortunate souls in Greek tragedy; they never realize the extent to
which they become the source of their own demise or that of the peo-
ple they most cherish. This is not usually because of their vices, but
more tragically the way in which commitment to specific virtues
obscures other factors of consideration. Hence Dewey’s remark:
“[E]ven when proper allowances are made [regarding the complex
relationship between character and consequences], we are forcing the
pace when we assume that there is or ever can be an exact equation of
disposition and outcome” (LW 14: HNC, 36).31 For this reason Dewey
describes living as a gamble: “We survey conditions, make the wisest
choice we can; we act, and we must trust the rest to fate, fortune or
providence” (LW 4: QC, 6).
If certainty cannot be had, Dewey’s aim is to structure inquiry such
that the judgments of action that we reach are the products of a bit
more than luck. But this means that inquiry is unintelligible (and will
often be unsuccessful) unless it proceeds via sensitivity to particulars.
This works on two levels. First, there is the character of the agent—the
experiences and habits that feed into and comprise his character. Sec-
ond, there is the complexity and salience of the situation of concern.
Inquiry works best as Dewey describes it when there is a dialectical rela-
tionship between these two levels. The well functioning of inquiry is
not merely a matter of proceduralism, but must, as I indicate in III,
also include appreciation for just those features of a situation that ought
to engage a person for us to say they have made an informed decision.
III
In the introduction I referred to Dewey’s notion of inquiry as a process.
Given the discussion in I and II, this means that inquiry’s use and sub-
sequent significance is functionally assessed in the flow and reconstruc-
tion of problematic experiences. Although there is a larger context in
which inquiry derives its significance, that context should not be viewed
as cordon-off from future reflection. But context must also be viewed as
a resource that feeds directly into inquiry’s proper functioning.
By way of hermeneutic imposition, let us return to Aristotle for a
moment to focus the analysis. When Aristotle refers to phronèsis as an
intellectual virtue, he indicates that it is a “reasoned and true state of
capacity to act with regard to human goods,” and when so exercised it
“issues commands, since its end is what ought to be done or not to be
T
R
A
N
S
A
C
T
I
O
N
S
102
15. done.”32 What Aristotle means by this statement is captured by the
relationship between phronèsis and the moral virtues. The virtue of gen-
erosity, for example, means that, when applied, it will be for the correct
reason in the right context. But exactly how are individuals to know
what the right context is if not because they have cultivated a level of
sensitivity to particular situations over time that helps render the use of
generosity intelligible? Sensitivity is a compact word in this instance; it
means that one has assessed the situation that suggests the need for gen-
erosity, one has ruled out the particular need for another virtue as a set-
tlement of the issue, and one has made a judgment that generosity fits
the need. Individuals build up a store-house of cases that allow them to
deal with other situations that are similar in structure, although not
identical in substance. Aristotle confirms this point by making deliber-
ation a feature of phronèsis: “Deliberation is concerned with things that
happen in a certain way for the most part, but in which the event is
obscure, and with things in which it is indeterminate.”33
As already noted, I read Dewey as expanding the reach of phronèsis
via Darwin. Another way to capture my point is to say that phronèsis,
for Aristotle, is to the moral virtues, what inquiry, for Dewey, is to
human action in toto. The claim is not, as indicated in §I, that phronè-
sis and inquiry are the same, but rather, if the latter is to function prop-
erly, it must, as I understand, include the content of what we mean
when we refer to the former. Inquiry, then, is a process exercised relative
to a particular context and embodied in actions, the substance of which
exists at the crossroads between various factors and reasons and the way
the agent determines them.
If we turn to Dewey’s formal structure of inquiry, we can see the two
levels mentioned earlier at work. He provides a precise statement of this
in his How We Think (1910):
(i) a felt difficulty; (ii) its location and definition; (iii) suggestion of
possible solution; (iv) development by reasoning of the bearings of
the suggestion; (v) further observation and experiment leading to its
acceptance or rejection; that is, the conclusion of belief or disbelief.
(MW 6: HWTa, 236; cf. MW 8: LJP, 15–23; LW 12: L, chaps 1, 6)
The felt difficulty means that the situation exerts pressure that demands
a response. The continuity within experience is fractured, opening up
the necessity for reflection so as to achieve restoration. But here the
fracture indicates the exhaustion of existing habits, so that the nature of
the problem requires creative valuation. What is needed is a judgment
of action, something to be done in which the problem acts as a guiding
marker in moving us through the other stages of our reflection.
The feeling of the difficulty requires us to localize and define the prob-
lem. As such, the issue itself may require several propositional formula-
Action
and
Inquiry
in
Dewey’s
Philosophy
•
Melvin
L.
Rogers
103
16. tions, before the clarity of the problem comes into view. We will often
need to take counsel with others or consult our funded experiences, for
example. So there may be a subclass of propositions that are constitutively
connected to articulating the precise problem to be addressed. “Their
subject-matter,” writes Dewey, “implies that the proposition is itself a fac-
tor in the completion of the situation, carrying it forward to its conclu-
sion” (MW 8: LJP, 16; cf. LW 12: L, 123–27).
Obviously this is an intermediate stage—an attempt to clarify the
situation so as to move onto other aspects that will settle the problem.
But even at this juncture, Dewey’s language indicates that there are bet-
ter or worse descriptions of the problem if we are to potentially arrive at
a solution. “Better” or “worse” indicates that unless the situation is
descriptively impenetrable, it must contain elements that refer to a
multitude of other—different—situations that indicate in abbreviated
form how this situation should look whether we are responsive to those
elements or not. Inquiry thus works, in Dewey’s view, as a culling
mechanism that registers content from the intersubjectively formed
social world that extends beyond the epistemic authority of the isolated
self. Our ability to make reference to comparable features of the social
world allows us to formulate objective claims about better or worse.
Responsibility for describing the situation—crystallizing its con-
tours or distorting them altogether—lies with the agent. That one takes
counsel with others, as Dewey often emphasizes in his understanding of
the cooperative character of inquiry, is based on the belief that others
may very well see the matter differently because their particular experi-
ences shape their perceptual abilities in ways unlike our own (LW 1:
EN, 135).34 This is particularly so, he insists, in moral and political
matters, but is no less apparent in empirical science. For in all cases
what is needed is a sense of “sympathy which carries thought out
beyond the self and which extends its scope . . . it is sympathy which
saves considerations of consequences from degenerating into mere cal-
culation, by rendering vivid the interests of others [or other factors] and
urging us to give them weight” (LW 7: E, 270).35 The kind of collabo-
ration suggested by intersubjectivity is a normative claim that there are
instances in which persons can incur blame for relying insufficiently or
too heavily upon themselves when assessing complex terrain in which a
judgment of action is necessary.
What Dewey is drawing our attention to is the explicability of action
that makes dialogical mediation central. To say some actions as opposed
to others proceed from inquiry is to evaluate their reasons as appropriate
because of the context in which they function. The agent is prepared to
justify why that action is done rather than some other, which, is simply
to say, action is explicable in terms of its reasons that make it an object
of assessment. We understand ourselves to be offering cause or basis
from a background of potential reasons that embody attentiveness to
T
R
A
N
S
A
C
T
I
O
N
S
104
17. just those various considerations one could offer given the situation of
concern. Situations require a judgment of action because our current
streams of habits encounter unanticipated obstacles, leaving us in a state
of doubt. When a hypothesis or norm is advanced as a response to a
problem situation, we usually justify our choice to other individuals by
reference to competing alternatives that for one reason or another fail to
sufficiently take into account important considerations which would
otherwise make them the best projected options. Practical actions, then,
have a linguistic counterpart—that is, they are responses to “why-
questions” in a practice of giving and accepting reasons.36 Hence, Dewey
refers to inquiry as a deliberative process in which explanation, defense,
and revision takes place: “[D]eliberation . . . regards the end-in-view . . .
as tentative and permits, nay encourages the coming into view of conse-
quences which will transform it and create new purpose and plan” (MW
14: HNC, 149). As he says elsewhere: “When communication occurs,
all natural events are subject to reconsideration and revision whether it
be public discourse or that preliminary discourse termed thinking” (LW
1: EN, 132).
Yet, what determines whether the problem is clearly described is
something other than the formal process of inquiry, and is rather bound
up with the shape of one’s receptivity from upbringing. This much
Dewey suggests: “Habit does not preclude the use of thought, but it
determines the channels within which it operates. Thinking is secreted
in the interstices of habits” (LW 2: PP, 335). Habits open the self to
receive considerations that inform inquiry’s functioning, and those
habits shape our understanding of those considerations. When we say a
person is diligent, focused, attentive to others, cold, unimaginative, dra-
matic, careless, we are delineating character traits that will direct and
condition both incoming data and information and outgoing responses
and proposals (Cf. LW 7: E, 256–58). We are reminded of situations in
which individuals exclude or fail to take into consideration factors that
might otherwise clarify the issue of concern. Our utterances often take
the form of: ‘Did you consider X?’ or ‘Did you look at Y?’ In some cases,
these utterances will simply bring to light information that guides
inquiry; they are not claims about a person’s character. But in other cases
these questions are asked because we know the agent to be just the sort
of person who would not consider such factors. Or, we know that
because of various features of a person’s character—traits such as the
ones listed above—they simply cannot see the way in which those con-
siderations ought to engage them given the problem.
These two previous statements advance different claims. The first
suggest that one’s character is of such a nature that given the situation
they simply ignore factors that any other competent inquirer in the sit-
uation would usually consider. The second claim suggests that the con-
siderations simply do not engage the person, independent of a desire
Action
and
Inquiry
in
Dewey’s
Philosophy
•
Melvin
L.
Rogers
105
18. and willingness to ignore them. But neither claim means for Dewey
that transformation within the self’s outlook is closed off, for if we
recall the self is relatively stable, not fixed.
To say that others can recognize and assess the content that feeds
into inquiry simply identifies individuals as sharing modes of percep-
tion, senses of significance, parallel cases, interests and desires—in
short, forms of life. This allows us to identify not only better or worse
characterizations of the problem situation, but more significantly, to
indicate that there is a best achievable state of the agent regarding sensi-
tivity to just those reasons and factors that help define the situation
from the outset.37 What to do is based on our understanding of the sit-
uation, and this requires as Dewey understands the matter a proper
appreciation for those features which are constitutive of the present
moment, but which can only be received based on the character of the
self. Construal of the situation will always be something more than pro-
ceduralism, even as these independent dictates guide inquiry to fruitful
destination points.
Phases (iii) and (iv), suggestion of possible solution and reasoning
from that suggestion, are critically important because they imply the
launching into the unknown. Dewey often refers to these stages as
involving the “art of inference:”
Every act of human life, not springing from instinct or mechanical
habit, contains it; most habits are dependent upon some amount of it
for their formation, as they are dependent upon it for their readapta-
tion to novel circumstances. From the humblest act of daily life to the
most intricate calculations of science . . . things are used as signs, indi-
cates, or evidence from which one proceeds to something else not yet
directly given. (MW 8: LJP, 16)
Here, inference is not functioning in the way that we would usually
find articulated by statisticians; it does not merely refer to induction
and deduction, but what Charles S. Peirce calls abduction—that is,
“studying facts and devising a theory to explain them. Its only justifica-
tion is that if we are ever to understand things at all, it must be in that
way.”38 As Norwood Hanson explains of Peirce’s point, although it
applies to Dewey’s account as well: “Deduction proves that something
must be; Induction shows that something actually is operative; Abduc-
tion merely suggest that something may be.”39 That inference is an art
for Dewey (as well as Peirce) means, among other things, that there is a
level of imprecision in our attentiveness to the relationship between
information so gathered and the hypothesis inferred and proposed. “A
keen eye and a quick ear,” he remarks, “are not in themselves guarantees
of correct knowledge . . . but they are conditions without which knowl-
edge cannot arise” (LW 7: E, 268). So inference here must be under-
T
R
A
N
S
A
C
T
I
O
N
S
106
19. stood broadly to denote a kind of receptivity to important elements of
an intricate situation. We move back and forth between information
and tentative judgments, at first only imaginatively envisioning the
proposed consequences and then ultimately following their course in
the domain of experience. But in this back and forth we are reasoning
and making tentative appraisals, taking hold of some set of factors that
allow us to move to some other set, while ruling out others, all of which
suggest that inference is a messy affair.
The fact that this is not explicable in clear rule-governing language
should not undermine its importance. For Dewey, we make inferences
within the horizon of the problem, not external to it, so that the judg-
ments made, as already indicated, implicate us in the resolution or irres-
olution of the situation. For this reason our conjectures, suggestions, or
beliefs potentially carry an attached risk that is located at two different
levels. The first level is the relationship between agent and context. Here
the self constitutes a fundamental datum in arriving at a solution. The
second level is the relationship between proposal and context. Here the
self confronts a potential disjunction between proposals (i.e. the ends of
inquiry) and what the world will allow. Thus Dewey says: “[T]hrough
inference men are capable of a kind of success and exposed to a kind of
failure not otherwise possible” (MW 8: LJP, 71).40
On a related note, Dewey’s account of inference sheds some light on
the creativity of inquiry. Consider, for a moment, the section heading
and subheading Dewey uses in Chapter 6, “Examples of Inference and
Testing” to the revised version of the How We Think (1933): “II. Infer-
ence to the Unknown” and “Inference Involves a Leap” (LW 8: HWTb,
190–91). The titles mean to signal the elusive context in which inquiry
proceeds. The terms “unknown” or “leap” in those subtitles are not
meant to suggest that we infer blindly largely because the problem
guides the structure of the inquiry. “[I]nference,” he says, “takes absent
things as being in certain real continuum with present things, so that
our attitude toward the latter is bound up with our reaction to the for-
mer as parts of the same situation” (MW 8: LJP, 71).
In the context of his work on aesthetics, Dewey uses the term “imag-
ination” instead of inference. For him, the solution to be reached in
light of a given context will often occur through a transmutation and
extension of experience. The imagination reconstructs and broadens
experience, thus giving a more complete representation of ends than are
suggested by the problematic environment in which we find ourselves.
The reconstruction is not merely on discreet happenings—the present
situation—but more dramatically, the funded nature of the present so
that the end-product of the imagination has a career both in the pres-
ent situation and what precedes it.41 This is what allows us to defend
against claims that our proposals or hypotheses are mere illusions, unre-
alistic or inattentive to evidence. Indeed, for Dewey, novel possibilities
Action
and
Inquiry
in
Dewey’s
Philosophy
•
Melvin
L.
Rogers
107
20. become “conscious, a matter of perception, only when meanings enter
[them] that are derived from prior experiences. Imagination is the only
gateway through which these meanings find their way into [the] pres-
ent” (LW 10: AE, 270–76, at 276).
The confirmation of phases (iii) and (iv) rests with stage (v), that of
further observation and testing, to which Dewey places particular
emphasis. “What is important is that every inference be a tested inference;
or that we discriminate between beliefs that rest upon tested evidenced and
those that do not, and be accordingly on our guard as to the kind and degree
of assent or belief that is justified” (LW 8: HWTb, 192 [original empha-
sis]). We are thus warranted in asserting a belief, the accuracy of a pro-
posed plan, or the appropriateness of this or that virtue if it settles the
experience that stimulated the inquiry. We should note that in certain
cases we will have suspended other beliefs that are ancillary to the
hypothesis tested. That is to say, there will be an array of factors that we
will need to take for granted but which contextualize the problem and
proposed hypothesis under consideration. In this case, acceptance of a
hypothesis means that it settles the problem, coheres with other settled
and suspended beliefs, and can potentially withstand new experiences
and argument if they arise. This last point merely carries through
Dewey’s initial commitment to experience as the beginning and termi-
nal point for inquiry, where terminal denotes a potentially different
temporal moment than the one in which the hypothesis originally set-
tled the matter.
We can now address a potential criticism that threatens to under-
mine the argument that Dewey transforms and thus moves beyond
Aristotle. The suggestion is that Aristotle specifically wants to distin-
guish between cases in which one employs inquiry for the acquisition of
some skill to achieve some given end for example, and a situation in
which the end itself is determined in the process of deliberation. If
these two are collapsed, we then risk obscuring the non-codifiable
nature of phronèsis. If applied to human action, it implies that in living
forward the purpose of human existence must be as fixed as the goal of
acquiring and using a skill. Here the distinction between phronèsis and
technè returns, but which points once more to the subtlety of Dewey’s
understanding of inquiry.
There is an interesting line of argument presented by Julia Annas in
her expansion of Aristotle’s thought for identifying the logical structure
that underwrites skill with virtue that Dewey anticipates in his formal
account of inquiry.42 As Annas writes, “to consider our telos as a fixed
point to guide our thoughts about the virtues is to get matters wrong
way round. It is not the object of the skill but the structure and unifi-
cation of the skilled reasoning that is the crucial point of analogy for
ethical reasoning.”43 This much Dewey suggests:
T
R
A
N
S
A
C
T
I
O
N
S
108
21. If thinking is the art by which knowledge is practiced, then the mate-
rials with which thinking deals may be supposed, by analogy with the
other arts, to take on in consequence special shapes. The man who is
making a boat will give wood a form which it did not have, in order
that it may serve the purposes to which it is to be put. Thinking may
then be supposed to give its material the form which will make it
amenable to its purposes—attaining knowledge . . . . (MW 8: LJP,
65–66 [emphasis added])
There is a clear sense in which the skill can easily be taught and
appropriated, but which in no way seems to depend on the practical
intelligence of the maker. But this wrongly imports, argue Dewey and
Annas, the determinate end back into the intellectual structure that is
necessary to achieve the end and subsequently bring it to fruition again.
If an instrument made to sail the boat-maker safely from one shore to
another looked very much like what we call a boat, but seemed to sink
immediately upon entering the water, we would scratch our heads in
bewilderment. For Dewey, this is because we wrongly believe that the
construction of objects such as boats require “mere repetition or literal
loyalty” to a model, and thus obscure the extent to which the individ-
ual must “take account of” or “reckon with” factors that are not mere
repetition, such as assessing, for example, “the grain and strength of the
wood” (MW 8: LJP, 67). This formulation immediately prompts us to
ask: ‘How much should we take account of?’ or ‘To what degree must
we reckon with various factors?’ If I understand Dewey correctly, the
answer to this question will often take the form: ‘You have to see for
yourself.’ Here we can make us of and slightly amend Annas’ language
in favor of Dewey: “As with any skill, we can give rules to help the
learner, but obviously there is no foolproof recipe or guarantee of suc-
cess. And so with [the practice of inquiry]—success is not mechanical;
there are many incalculable failures of temperament or intellect that
may thwart the right decision.” Understanding this point, keeps us
from being tempted to see in Dewey the “ideal of a purely mechanical
decision-making procedure, one which would do the work for us and
leave no role to individual deliberation.”44
We can draw two main points from the considerations above. First,
the emergence of inquiry need not imply a substantive character to the
end as the example of boat-making suggest. It need only claim that the
assessment of the end implies that its career begin and terminate in
experience, the result of which often means that the agent is doing
much more than merely following a formal decision-making proce-
dure. Second, this does not rule out those cases in which the means
used to settle some problem impacts, transforms, and define what
determinate judgment we make.45 Recall that the character of the agent
and response from the environment impacts considerations and factors
Action
and
Inquiry
in
Dewey’s
Philosophy
•
Melvin
L.
Rogers
109
22. at various stages of the overall inquiry, so that a subclass of outcomes
will often reflexively impact the original intentions and outlook of the
agent. Indeed, Dewey says as much, invoking the image of our moral
lives: “The more completely the notion of the model is formed outside
and irrespective of the specific conditions which the situation of action
presents, the less intelligent is the act.” Such individuals will seem
insensitive, as lacking sympathy and being dogmatic. Their judgments
will seem uninformed. In such cases, Dewey says, “[t]he man who is
not accessible to such change in the case of moral situations has ceased
to be a moral agent and become a reacting machine” (MW 8: LJP, 38–
39). His claim is obviously wide enough to account for reflection about
what is to count as the end. But this requires a much richer narrative
about the communities involved, their ethical and political commit-
ments, and willingness to subject their decisions to scrutiny and revi-
sion. I say in brief, that for Dewey this last point immediately signals
that whatever our ends are they are subject to epistemic constraints,
which contain normative implications that can potentially transform
how we navigate through our political and ethical landscapes.
Conclusion
The point of this essay was to sketch another way to read Dewey’s
account of inquiry and its proper functioning. As shown, inquiry is not
merely a formal procedure, but a disposition whose functioning aims to
be responsive to just those considerations that a particular situation
demands. This sensitivity, as we have observed, forms a crucial feature
of human action in toto. As such, Dewey’s conception of inquiry is con-
textually sensitive, imaginatively rich, and discursively open so that the
ends of inquiry are subject to assessment and revision. This humbles
the agent—a fact that is not usually associated with Dewey’s philoso-
phy. But I would urge that we work very hard to resist reading his con-
ception of inquiry in any other way and we can do this if his philosophy
of action from which it proceeds is kept in the foreground. Only then
can the task of genuinely appreciating his political and ethical philoso-
phy begin, with the hopes that it will help us plot a safer course though
the human condition.
Carleton College
mrogers@carleton.edu
NOTES
1. Thanks to Eddie S. Glaude, Jeffrey Stout, Cornel West, Seyla Benhabib,
Ian Shapiro, Steven Smith, Vincent Colapietro, Brian Garsten, Michelle Tolman-
Clarke, Laurence Cooper, Kimberly Smith, Angela Curran, Eric Beerbohm,
Melissa Lane, Jack Turner and several anonymous reviewers for helpful advice and
T
R
A
N
S
A
C
T
I
O
N
S
110
23. encouragement. An earlier version of this essay was presented at the political the-
ory workshop at Yale University in 2005.
2. See James E. Block, Nation of Agents (Cambridge: Belknap Press of Har-
vard University, 2002), chap. 13.
3. Cornel West, The American Evasion of Philosophy: A Genealogy of Pragma-
tism (Wisconsin: University of Wisconsin Press, 1989), chap. 3, at 101–102; John
Patrick Diggins, The Promise of Pragmatism (Chicago: The University of Chicago
Press, 1994), chaps. 5–7, especially at 299–305; Patrick J. Deneen, Democratic
Faith (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2005), chaps. 1–2, 6.
4. See in this regard, James Campbell, Understand John Dewey: Nature and
Cooperative Intelligence (Chicago: Open Court, 1995), pt. 2; Larry A. Hickman,
John Dewey’s Pragmatic Technology (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1992);
Michael Eldridge, Transforming Experience: John Dewey’s Cultural Instrumentalism
(Nashville: Vanderbilt University Press, 1998), chap. 2; Robert Westbrook, John
Dewey and American Democracy (Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1991); Matthew
Festenstein, Pragmatism and Political Theory: From Dewey to Rorty (Chicago: Uni-
versity of Chicago Press, 1997); William R. Caspary, Dewey on Democracy (Ithaca:
Cornell University Press, 2000); John R. Shook, Dewey’s EmpiricalTheory of Knowl-
edge and Reality (Nashville: Vanderbilt University Press, 2000).
5. In saying that Dewey’s reformism is chastened, I do not intend to under-
cut its radical character with respect to reconstructing political and social condi-
tions. My point is to emphasize that for Dewey reform is a socio-historical
possibility, but does not inhere in the nature of things.
6. The exception in this regard includes: Richard Bernstein, Praxis and Action
(Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 1971), chap. III; cf. Thomas
Alexander, “John Dewey and the Roots of Democratic Imagination,” in Recov-
ering Pragmatism’s Voice: The Classical Tradition, Rorty, and the Philosophy of
Communication, eds. Lenore Langsdorf and Andrew R. Smith (Albany: State
University of New York Press, 1995), 131–54; Hans Joas, The Creativity of Action,
trans. Jeremy Gaines and Paul Keast (Chicago: University of Chicago Press,
1996), chap. 2.
7. For another thinker that reads Dewey as transforming Aristotelian insights
although with different aims in mind see, Hickman, John Dewey’s Pragmatic Tech-
nology.
8. Aristotle, Nicomachean Ethics, trans. W. D. Ross in The Basic Works of Aris-
totle, ed. Richard McKeon (New York: Random House, 1941), VI.3, 1139b15–
35. For helpful works on which I partly rely see, Joseph Dunne, Back to the Rough
Ground: ‘Phronesis’ and ‘Techne’ in Modern Philosophy and in Aristotle (Notre
Dame: University of Notre Dame Press, 1993), pt. 2; Julia Annas, The Morality of
Happiness (New York: Oxford University Press, 1993), 73–91; J. L. Ackrill, “Aris-
totle on Action,” in Essays on Aristotle’s Ethics, ed. Amélie Oksenberg Rorty (Berke-
ley: University of California Press, 1980), 93–101; Amélie Oksenberg Rorty, “The
Place of Contemplation in Aristotle’s Nicomachean Ethics,” in Essays on Aristotle’s
Ethics, 377–395; Martha Nussbaum, Fragility of Goodness, (New York: Cambridge
University Press, 1986), chap. 10; cf. 373–378; John McDowell, Mind, Value, and
Reality (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1998), pt. I. I use the word “partly”
because there are revisionist aspects to some of these readings of Aristotle that I
have not endorsed in the context of my reading.
Action
and
Inquiry
in
Dewey’s
Philosophy
•
Melvin
L.
Rogers
111
24. 9. All quotes from Dewey are taken from his Collected Works and are cited
intertextually unless otherwise noted. The notation is as follows: (volume number:
text, page number). I abbreviate the volume notation as follows: EW = The Early
Works, 1882–1898, ed. Jo An Boydston (Carbondale, IL: University of Southern
Illinois Press, 1969–1972); MW = The Middle Works, 1899–1924, ed. Jo Ann
Boydston (Carbondale, IL: University of Southern Illinois Press, 1976–1983);
LW = The Later Works, 1925–1953, ed. Jo Ann Boydston (Carbondale, IL: Uni-
versity of Southern Illinois Press, 1984–1991). I abbreviate texts as follows: RC =
“The Reflex Arc Concept in Psychology,” LJP = “The Logic of Judgments of Prac-
tice,” IDP = “The Influence of Darwinism on Philosophy,” HWTa = How We
Think, P = “Progress,” DE = Democracy and Education, NRP = “The Need for
Recovery of Philosophy,” RIP = Reconstruction in Philosophy, HNC = Human
Nature and Conduct, EN = Experience and Nature, PP = Publics and Its Problems,
QC = The Quest for Certainty, E = Ethics, HWTb = How We Think, AE = Art as
Experience, L = Logic: A Theory of Inquiry.
10. Raymond D. Boisvert, Dewey’s Metaphysics (New York: Fordham Univer-
sity Press, 1988), chap. 2; Campbell, Understanding John Dewey, chap. 2; Shook,
Dewey’s Empirical, 199–202.
11. Aristotle, Ethics, VI, X.7–9.
12. Ibid., VI.3, 1139a-VI.5.
13. Ibid., I.3.
14. Ibid., VI.7, 1141a20-b9; cf. X.7–9.
15. Only rarely do we attribute wisdom to judgment-specific actions that do
not have fruitful results and this is usually in cases where the realization of the
judgment’s content is beyond our control. Here Dewey uses the example of the
surgeon, so that we “would not say that the act of a surgeon is necessarily to be
condemned because an operation results in the death of a patient . . . morally his
act was beneficent, although unsuccessful from causes which he could not con-
trol” (LW 7: E, 173–74). Notwithstanding, Dewey’s point nonetheless rejects
Aristotle’s contention that: “In the variable are included both things made and
things done; making and acting are different (for their nature we treat even the
discussions outside our school as reliable); so that the reasoned state of capacity to
act is different from the reasoned state of capacity to make” (Aristotle, Ethics, VI.3,
1140a [emphasis added]).
16. Robert B. Brandom, “The Pragmatist Enlightenment (and its Problematic
Semantics),” European Journal of Philosophy 12.1 (2004): 2; Ralph Ketcham, The
Idea of Democracy in the Modern Era (Lawrence, KA: University of Kansas Press,
2004), chaps. 4–6. I recognize that the origins of this experimental approach pre-
cede Darwin. For Dewey, however, experimentalism in the context of Darwin’s
biological paradigm solidifies an important way of understanding inquiry.
17. Cf. Aristotle’s contrary remark, Ethics, VI.5, 1140a30.
18. For a helpful essay that equally emphasize this point see, Caspary, “‘One
and the Same’: John Dewey’s Thesis of Unity of Method of Ethics and Science,”
Transactions of the Charles S. Peirce Society 39.3 (2003): 445–68.
19. In emphasizing the importance of Darwin, I believe my account is consis-
tent with John Shook’s insistence on the priority of Hegel to Dewey’s philosophy,
since I am not trying to explain “the transformation of his absolute idealism into
instrumentalist empiricism” or answer the question, “when did Dewey stop being
an idealist and become a pragmatist?” (Shook, Dewey’s Empirical Theory, chaps. 1
T
R
A
N
S
A
C
T
I
O
N
S
112
25. and 5, at 202 and 210). The settlement of this issue is found in a remark of John
Herman Randall: “John Dewey is a cardinal illustration of the fact that Darwin
seemed to bring biological, that is, ‘scientific’ support to an essential Hegelian
‘mode of thinking.’ Darwin forced Dewey to reconstruct many of the Hegelian
ideas, to be sure: he compelled a basic pluralizing of Hegel, and a putting of his
thought upon an experimental basis” (Randall, “The Changing Impact of Darwin
on Philosophy,” Journal of the History of Ideas 22.4 [1961], 450). Even here, it
should be noted that despite the movement of Spirit in Hegel, he does not have an
understanding of the naturalistic mechanics of evolution.
20. Aristotle, Ethics, I.3, 1094b20–23.
21. The uncertainty implied by “if” is very important. Dewey is clear that after
abandoning Hegelian idealism, his interest in harmonizing the disparate features
of social life remained, but it had to proceed on “empirical grounds” (see “Biogra-
phy of John Dewey,” ed. Jane M. Dewey, in The Philosophy of John Dewey, ed. Paul
A. Schilpp [Evanston, IL: Northwestern University, 1939], 18). Dewey uses the
term “empirical grounds” to indicate the experimental core of his thinking, the
result of which makes clear that while reconciliation may be stipulated as a formal
goal of political and moral conflict the possibility of achieving it is uncertain. This
point seems to escape what is an otherwise excellent book on pragmatism. See Eric
MacGilvray, Reconstructing Public Reason (Cambridge: Harvard University Press,
2004), chap. 5, at 135–36.
22. MacGilvrary, Reconstructing Public Reason, 109; cf. James Bohman, “Real-
izing Deliberative Democracy as a Mode of Inquiry: Pragmatism, Social Facts, and
Normative Theory,” Journal of Speculative Philosophy 18.1 (2004): 23–43.
23. West, American, 226.
24. Raymond D. Boisvert, “The Nemesis of Necessity: Tragedy’s Challenge to
Deweyan Pragmatism,” in Dewey Reconfigured: Essays on Deweyan Pragmatism,
eds. Casey Haskins and David I Seiple (Albany: State University of New York
Press, 1999), 158; cf. Deneen, Democratic Faith, 75–77.
25. That Boisvert would say this of Dewey in the first instance is very strange,
since he writes elsewhere: “Unlike the philosophers he criticizes, Dewey does not
begin with a prior commitment to achieving absolute certainty. Human knowing
is provisional, incomplete, and probabilistic. We rarely act with the absolute secu-
rity that our choices are the absolutely appropriate ones” (Boisvert, John Dewey:
Rethinking Our Time [Albany: State University of New York Press, 1998], 16; cf.
25). And in the essay of his to which I referred he often speaks of Dewey incorpo-
rating “elements central to the tragic,” but he then concludes that “[w]hereas the
tragedian realizes that mind will always be in some ways blind to the multifarious
working of necessity, Dewey’s reformist faith leads him to lean in the opposite
direction. For him mind can come to dominate necessity” (Boisvert, “Nemesis of
Necessity,” 163). That mind can come to dominate necessity does not mean it
will. This claim seems to me completely consistent with acknowledging the fact
that we are blind to the multifarious workings of necessity, which may intervene
to our disadvantage. But perhaps I am getting ahead of myself.
26. West, American, 100–02; cf. Boisvert, “The Nemesis of Necessity,” 151–68.
27. Diggins, Promise of Pragmatism, 304; cf. Block, A Nation of Agents, chap.
13; Deneen, Democratic Faith, 75–77, 174–78.
28. In his recent book, Democratic Faith, Patrick Deneen seems to argue that
because Dewey does not accept original sin or something like this account then we
Action
and
Inquiry
in
Dewey’s
Philosophy
•
Melvin
L.
Rogers
113
26. should not take seriously his commitment to uncertainty and doubt. Thus he
writes: “Herein lies the paradox: Dewey, and those like Dewey who embrace
‘doubt’ as the fundamental ‘antifoundation’ of modern politics, ultimately rest
that doubt on a deeper foundation of faith in the capacity of humanity to funda-
mentally master its environment . . . The embrace of ‘doubt,’ the rejection of ‘cer-
tainty,’ rests on a curious absence of doubt about human abilities and the potential
for politics to resolve all challenges” (Deneen, Democratic Faith, 185). To begin,
the relationship between human abilities and politics is mistaken precisely because
Dewey thought conflict was usually the stimulus to politics (see Caspary, Dewey
on Democracy, chaps. 1 and 5). Politics, for him, is a constant and never-ending
process of managing and negotiation our common arrangements through specific
problems. For our purposes, what we should focus on is the alternative position to
the one described here by Deneen. If we reject the position that we can potentially
mitigate the impact of contingency given what we know of our history, then are
we to accept the claim that we are so fundamentally depraved that managing and
negotiating our world is denied to us? But I am unclear, as Dewey would be, on
what basis we should accept this latter position, and why accepting the former
position precludes us from being humble regarding our interventions in the
world. As Dewey says in Human Nature and Conduct: “Humility is more
demanded at our moments of triumph than at those of failure. For humility is not
caddish self-depreciation. It is the sense of our slight inability even with our best
intelligence and effort to command events; a sense of our dependence upon forces
that go their way without our wish and plan” (MW 14: HNC, 200).
29. The importance for Dewey of narrative to character and action is quite
similar to contemporary thinkers see, Alasdair MacIntyre, After Virtue (Notre
Dame: University of Notre Dame Press, 1981), chap. 15; Owen Flanagan, Vari-
eties of Moral Personality (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1991), 148–58.
30. See William James, Essays in Radical Empiricism (New York: Longman,
Green and Company, 1912/1922), 10.
31. Indeed, as he says later on: “Men who devote themselves to thinking are
likely to be unusually unthinking in some respects, as for example in immediate
personal relationships. A man to whom exact scholarship is an absorbing pursuit
may be more than ordinarily vague in ordinary matters. Humility and impartial-
ity may be shown in a specialized field, and pettiness and arrogance in dealing
with other persons” (MW 14: HNC, 137).
32. Aristotle, Ethics, VI.4, 1140b20, VI.10, 1143a8–15.
33. Ibid., III.3, 1112a30-b13 (emphasis added), VI.5, 1140a30–35; cf.
Dewey, MW 14: HNC, chaps. 16–17; LW 7: E, 273–74.
34. Although Dewey does not highlight this point consistently, it would be a
mistake to think that communicative social interaction is not central to the proper
functioning of inquiry. For more on this point see, Steven Fesmire, John Dewey
and Moral Imagination: Pragmatism in Ethics (Bloomington: Indiana University
Press, 2003), 81–82.
35. Cf. McDowell, Mind, Value, and Reality, 67; Sabina Lovibond, Ethical For-
mation (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 2002), pt. 1. It is important to
note in this regard that although sympathy is used in this context to denote what
appears to be solitary reflection, it would be mistaken to conclude on this point.
Dewey intends for sympathy to function during dialogical exchanges—that is, it
T
R
A
N
S
A
C
T
I
O
N
S
114
27. partly makes us receptive to the other as well as capable of understanding their
perspective.
36. I am borrowing some language here, although not inconsistent with
Dewey’s position (See MW 14: HNC, chap. 14; LW 1: EN, chap. 5). See Jeffrey
Stout, Democracy and Tradition (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2004),
231–37; cf. Brandom, Making it Explicit: Reasoning, Representing, and Discursive
Commitment (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1994)), xiv, 245–55.
37. This reading both borrows from and puts Dewey in proximity to McDow-
ell and Lovibond, especially when the latter writes: “Such evaluative distinctions
suggest the further thought that there is such a thing as a best possible condition of
the individual deliberator with respect to the appreciation of objective reasons . . .”
(Lovibond, Ethical Formation, 8; cf. LW 7: E, 270–71). But both she and
McDowell are unwilling to extend this beyond the ethical domain, remaining
within the horizon of an antiquated Aristotelianism.
38. Cited in Norwood Russell Hanson, Patterns of Discovery: An Inquiry into
the Conceptual Foundations of Science (New York: Cambridge University Press,
1958), 85.
39. Ibid., original emphasis.
40. Cf. Joas, Creativity of Action, 133.
41. Cf. ibid., 126–44. For other works that emphasize the importance of
imagination and aesthetic elements to Dewey’s account of inquiry, see Alexander,
John Dewey’s Theory of Art, Experience and Nature: The Horizons of Feeling (Albany:
State University of New York, 1987), chap. 5, “Dewey and the Metaphysical
Imagination,” Transactions of the Charles S. Peirce Society 28.2 (1992): 203–15;
Fesmire, John Dewey and Moral Imagination, chap. 4.
42. I say expansion because Annas is clear that she goes beyond Aristotle at this
juncture of her argument. See Annas, Morality of Happiness, 67–73.
43. Ibid., 71.
44. Ibid., 71–72.
45. For more on the means-ends relationship in Dewey see, Eldridge, Trans-
forming Experience, chap. 4. Action
and
Inquiry
in
Dewey’s
Philosophy
•
Melvin
L.
Rogers
115