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Philosophy Americana: Making Philosophy at Home in American Culture (American Philosophy) PDF

309 Pages·2006·1.35 MB·English
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philosophy americana .................15741$ $$FM 02-13-0614:42:06 PS PAGEi .................15741$ $$FM 02-13-0614:42:06 PS PAGEii p h i l o s o p h y a m e r i c a n a Making Philosophy at Home in American Culture (cid:2) douglas r anderson . fordham university press new york 2006 .................15741$ $$FM 02-13-0614:42:06 PS PAGEiii Copyright(cid:2)2006FordhamUniversityPress Allrightsreserved.Nopartofthispublicationmaybereproduced,stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means— electronic, mechanical, photocopy, recording, or any other—except for briefquotationsinprintedreviews,withoutthepriorpermissionofthe publisher. AmericanPhilosophySeries,No.18 ISSN1073-2764 LibraryofCongressCataloging-in-PublicationData Anderson,DouglasR. PhilosophyAmericana:makingphilosophyathomeinAmerican culture/DouglasR.Anderson.—1sted. p.cm.—(Americanphilosophyseries;no.18) Includesbibliographicalreferencesandindex. ISBN0-8232-2550-X(cloth:alk.paper) ISBN0-8232-2551-8(pbk.:alk.paper) 1.Philosophy,American—20thcentury. 2.UnitesStates— Civilization—20thcentury. I.Title. II.Series B936.A53 2006 191—dc22 PrintedintheUnitedStatesofAmerica 07 06 5 4 3 2 1 Firstedition .................15741$ $$FM 02-13-0614:42:06 PS PAGEiv Contents (cid:2) Acknowledgments vii Preface ix Introduction:Inheritance,Teaching, andtheInsaneAngels ofAmericanCulture:OurCulturalInvisibility 1 1 Some PreliminaryRemarksontheOriginsof Pragmatism 19 2 Royce,Philosophy,and Wandering:AJobDescription 33 3 WildernessasPhilosophicalHome 50 4 WorkingCertaintyandDeweyan Wisdom 65 5 WildnessasPoliticalAct 85 6 ‘‘AfterAll,He’s JustaMan’’:TheWildSideofLifein Country Music 94 7 WilliamJamesandtheWildBeastsofthePhilosophical Desert 112 8 JohnDewey’sSensibleMysticism 129 9 ‘‘BorntoRun’’:MaleMysticismontheRoad 142 10 Philosophy asTeaching:James’s‘‘KnightErrant,’’ ThomasDavidson 155 11 Learningand Teaching:Gambling,Love,and Growth (withMichaelVentimiglia) 167 12 Emerson’s PlatonizingofAmericanThought 188 { v } .................15741$ CNTS 02-13-0614:42:09 PS PAGEv vi contents 13 AmericanLossinCavell’sEmerson 206 14 EmersonandKerouac: GrievousAngelsofHope andLoss 221 15 PragmaticIntellectuals:FacingLossintheSpirit of AmericanPhilosophy 234 Notes 255 Bibliography 281 Index 289 .................15741$ CNTS 02-13-0614:42:09 PS PAGEvi Acknowledgments (cid:2) I would like to thank the following journals for permission to re- print here, in whole or in part, articles that were previously pub- lished. ‘‘Philosophy as Teaching: James’s ‘Knight Errant’’’ appeared inTheJournalofSpeculativePhilosophyinfall2004.‘‘Unrespectability and the Wild Beasts of the Philosophical Desert’’ appeared in the samejournalinwinter2003.‘‘CreativeTeachers:Risk,Responsibility, andLove’’waspublishedinJournalofEducationin2002.Anessayon Thoreau,entitled‘‘WildnessasPoliticalAct,’’appearedinPersonalist Forum in spring 2000. Finally, ‘‘American Loss in Cavell’s Emerson’’ was published by the Transactions of the Charles S. Peirce Society in winter 1993. I would like also to thank David O’Hara for the cover photography and Gary Green for the generous use of his College HeightsExxonstation. { vii } .................15741$ $ACK 02-13-0614:42:11 PS PAGEvii .................15741$ $ACK 02-13-0614:42:12 PS PAGEviii Preface (cid:2) A lthough the classical American philosophers published books, the great majority of these were collections of essays. Indeed, with the exception of Royce, who worked in a variety of ways, the American philosophical tradition is a tradition of essays, talks, and lectures collected into single volumes. Philosophy Americana is writ- ten withthis tradition inmind. Nevertheless, abook of essayshas its own kind of economy. Though I hope that each essay can stand alone, I also hope that they work together to provide a landscape or at least a horizon of my own philosophical outlook. The one generic theme I might venture as unifying the essays is the relationship be- tween American philosophy and other features of American culture. I am interested in how philosophers work in this culture. I employ the term ‘‘Americana’’ to draw a rough analogy to the musical genre ofthesamename.Americanamusicistwice‘‘American.’’Itisrooted in the traditional musical practices of the immigrants to the United States:blues, gospel,Celtic, folk,country,Tex-Mex,swing,bluegrass, old-time, rock and roll, reggae, and, I would add, more recently, rap and hip-hop. No doubt there are some category mistakes in this list, but part of the import of ‘‘Americana music’’ is precisely its indeter- minateness, and thus its openness to new and innovative musical styles. At the same time, Americana music, especially in its lyrical content,tellsusmuchaboutourAmericanculture—aboutourselves. In Philosophy Americana I aim at doing something similar, drawing on the philosophical practices of American thinkers and addressing issuesthatariseinpopularculture. { ix } .................15741$ PREF 02-13-0614:42:15 PS PAGEix

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In this engaging book, Douglas Anderson begins with the assumption that philosophy-the Greek love of wisdom-is alive and well in American culture. At the same time, professional philosophy remains relatively invisible. Anderson traverses American life to find places in the wider culture where profes
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