Neil Gross's Deweyan Account of Rorty's Intellectual Development

Transactions of the Charles S. Peirce Society 47 (1):3-27 (2011)
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Abstract

Writing about the intellectual development of a philosopher is a delicate business. My own endeavor to reinterpret the influence of Hegel on Dewey troubles some scholars because, they believe, I make Dewey seem less original.1 But if, like Dewey, we overcome Cartesian dualism, placing the development of the self firmly within a complex matrix of social processes, we are forced to reexamine, without necessarily surrendering, the notion of individual originality, or what Neil Gross calls “discourse[s] of creative genius.”2 To use a mundane example, I can recall several conversations with Dewey scholars about his dislike for his home state of Vermont, all of which revolved around personal reasons he may..

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Elizabeth F. Cooke
Creighton University

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The Sociology of the Local: Action and its Publics.Gary Alan Fine - 2010 - Sociological Theory 28 (4):355 - 376.
Recent Metaphilosophy.Richard Rorty - 1961 - Review of Metaphysics 15 (2):299 - 318.

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