Pragmatism
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36 pages
English

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The philosophical school of thought known as pragmatism focuses on the mind and thoughts as tools for rational decision-making. This concept proved to be enormously influential throughout the twentieth century. In this concise volume, Murray presents a thorough discussion of pragmatism and the ideas underpinning it.

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Publié par
Date de parution 01 juillet 2014
Nombre de lectures 0
EAN13 9781776583614
Langue English

Informations légales : prix de location à la page 0,0134€. Cette information est donnée uniquement à titre indicatif conformément à la législation en vigueur.

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PRAGMATISM
* * *
D. L. MURRAY
 
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Pragmatism First published in 1912 Epub ISBN 978-1-77658-361-4 Also available: PDF ISBN 978-1-77658-362-1 © 2013 The Floating Press and its licensors. All rights reserved. While every effort has been used to ensure the accuracy and reliability of the information contained in The Floating Press edition of this book, The Floating Press does not assume liability or responsibility for any errors or omissions in this book. The Floating Press does not accept responsibility for loss suffered as a result of reliance upon the accuracy or currency of information contained in this book. Do not use while operating a motor vehicle or heavy equipment. Many suitcases look alike. Visit www.thefloatingpress.com
Contents
*
Preface Chapter I - The Genesis of Pragmatism Chapter II - The New Psychology Chapter III - Will in Cognition Chapter IV - The Dilemmas of Dogmatism Chapter V - The Problem of Truth and Error Chapter VI - The Failure of Formal Logic Chapter VII - The Bankruptcy of Intellectualism Chapter VIII - Thought and Life Bibliography Endnotes
Preface
*
Mr. Murray's youthful modesty insists that his study of Pragmatism needsa sponsor; this is not at all my own opinion, but I may take theopportunity of pointing out how singularly qualified he is to give agood account of it.
In the first place he is young, and youth is an almost indispensablequalification for the appreciation of novelty; for the mind works moreand more stiffly as it grows older, and becomes less and less capable ofabsorbing what is new. Hence, if our 'great authorities' lived for ever,they would become complete Struldbrugs . This is the justification ofdeath from the standpoint of social progress. And as there is no subjectin which Struldbruggery is more rampant than in philosophy, a youthfuland nimble mind is here particularly needed. It has given Mr. Murray aneye also to the varieties of Pragmatism and to their connections.
Secondly, Mr. Murray has (like myself) enjoyed the advantage of aseverely intellectualistic training in the classical philosophy ofOxford University, and in its premier college, Balliol. The aim of thistraining is to instil into the best minds the country produces anadamantine conviction that philosophy has made no progress sinceAristotle. It costs about £50,000 a year, but on the whole it issingularly successful. Its effect upon capable minds possessed of commonsense is to produce that contempt for pure intellect which distinguishesthe British nation from all others, and ensures the practical success ofadministrators selected by an examination so gloriously irrelevant totheir future duties that, since the lamentable demise of the Chinesesystem, it may boast to be the most antiquated in the world. In minds,however, which are more prone to theorizing, but at the same timeclear-headed, this training produces a keenness of insight into thedefects of intellectualism and a perception of the intellectualnecessity of Pragmatism which can probably be reached in no other way.Mr. Murray, therefore, is quite right in emphasizing, above all, theservices of Pragmatism as a rigorously critical theory of knowledge, andin refuting the amiable delusion of many pedants that Pragmatism ismerely an emotional revolt against the rigors of Logic. It isessentially a reform of Logic, which protests against a Logic that hasbecome so formal as to abstract from meaning altogether.
Thirdly, an elementary introduction to Pragmatism was greatly needed,less because the subject is inherently difficult than because it hasbecome so deeply involved in philosophic controversy. Intrinsically itshould be as easy to make philosophy intelligible as any other subject.The exposition of a truth is difficult only to those who have notunderstood it, or do not desire to reveal it. But British philosophy hadlong become almost as open as German to the (German) gibe that'philosophy is nothing but the systematic misuse of a terminologyinvented expressly for this purpose,' and Pragmatism, too, could obtaina hearing only by showing that it could parley with its foes in thetechnical language of Kant and Hegel.
Hence it had no leisure to compose a fitting introduction to itself forstudents of philosophy. William James's Pragmatism , great as it is asa work of genius, brilliant as it is as a contribution to literature,was intended mainly for the man in the street. It is so lacking in thefamiliar philosophic catchwords that it may be doubted whether anyprofessor has quite understood it. And moreover, it was written someyears ago, and no longer covers the whole ground. The other writings ofthe pragmatists have all been too controversial and technical.
The critics of Pragmatism have produced only caricatures so gross as tobe unrecognizable, and so obscure as to be unintelligible. Mr. Murray'slittle book alone may claim to be (within its limits) a complete surveyof the field, simply worded, and yet not unmindful of due technicality.It is also up to date, though in dealing with so progressive a subjectit is impossible to say how long it is destined to remain so.
F. C. S. SCHILLER.
Chapter I - The Genesis of Pragmatism
*
There is a curious impression to-day in the world of thought thatPragmatism is the most audacious of philosophic novelties, the mostanarchical transvaluation of all respectable traditions. Sometimes it ispictured as an insurgence of emotion against logic, sometimes as anassault of theology upon the integrity of Pure Reason. One day it isdescribed as the reckless theorizing of dilettanti whose knowledge ofphilosophy is too superficial to require refutation, the next as atransatlantic importation of the debasing slang of the Wild West. Abroadit is frequently denounced as an outbreak of the sordid commercialism ofthe Anglo-Saxon mind.
All these ideas are mistaken. Pragmatism is neither a revolt againstphilosophy nor a revolution in philosophy, except in so far as it is animportant evolution of philosophy. It is a collective name for the mostmodern solution of puzzles which have impeded philosophical progressfrom time immemorial, and it has arisen naturally in the course ofphilosophical reflection. It answers the big problems which are asfamiliar to the scientist and the theologian as to the metaphysician andepistemologist, and which are both intelligible and interesting tocommon sense.
The following questions stand out: (1) Can the possibility of knowledgebe maintained against Hume and other sceptics? Certainly, if it can beshown that 'The New Psychology' has antiquated the analysis of mindwhich Hume assumed and 'British Associationism' respectfully continuedto uphold. (2) Seeing that inclination and volition indisputably play apart in the acceptance of all beliefs, scientific and religious, whatis the logical significance of this fact? This yields the problem 'TheWill to Believe,' and more generally of 'the place of Will incognition.' (3) Is there no criterion by which the divergent claims ofrival creeds and philosophies—to be possessed of unconditionaltruth—can be scientifically tested? The sceptic's sneer, that theshifting systems of philosophy illustrate only the changing fashions ofa great illusion about man's capacity for truth, plunges dogmatism intoa 'Dilemma,' from which it can emerge only by finding a way ofdiscriminating a 'truth' from an 'error,' and so solving the 'problem ofTruth and Error.' The weird verbalism of the traditional Logic suggestsa problem which strikes deeper even than the question, 'What do youmean by truth?' viz.: 'Do you mean anything?' and so the 'problem ofMeaning' is propounded by the failure of Formal Logic. Is Logic notconcerned at all with meaning , is it only juggling with empty forms ofwords? Lastly, if from all this there springs up a conviction of 'TheBankruptcy of Intellectualism,' the question suggests itself whether therelation between abstract thinking and concrete experience, between'Thought' and 'Life,' has been rightly grasped. Is life worth livingonly for the sake of philosophic contemplation, or is thinking onlyworth doing to aid us in the struggle for life? Are 'theory' and'practice' two separate kingdoms with rigid frontiers, strictly guarded,or does it appear that theories which cannot be applied have, in theend, neither worth, nor truth, nor even meaning?
It is plain from this catalogue of inquiries that Pragmatism makes noabrupt breach in tradition. It is not the pétroleuse of philosophy. Itdoes not wipe out the history of speculation in order to announce amillennium of new ideas; it claims, on the contrary, to be theculmination and dénoûment of that history. It cannot rightly berepresented as trying either to sell new lamps for old, or tojerry-build a new metaphysical system on the ruins of all previousachievements. Its real task is singularly modest. It aims merely atinstructing system-builders in the elementary laws which condition thestability of such structures and conduce to their conservation.
It is therefore a grave mistake to regard it as a parochialeccentricity, as a specific Americanism. Nor is it the product of themisplaced ingenuity of individual paradox-mongers. It has come intobeing by the convergence of distinct lines of thought pursued indifferent countries by different thinkers.
1. One of the most interesting of these has originated in the scientificworld. The immense growth of scientific knowledge during the lastcentury was bound to react on human conceptions of scientific procedure.The enormous number of new facts brought to light by manipulatinghypotheses could not but modify our view of scientific law. Laws nolonger seem to scientists the immutable foundations of an eternal order,but are inevitably treated as man-made formulae for grouping andpredicting the events which verify them. The labours of physicists likeMach, Duhem, and Ostwald, point to alternative formulations of newhypotheses for the best established laws. The physics of Newton are nol

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