> DDC 160.92
J 74
Johnston, James Scott.
JOHN DEWEY'S LATER LOGICAL THEORY [[electronic resource].] / James Scott. Johnston. - [Б. м.] : STATE UNIV OF NEW YORK PR,, 2020. - 1 online resource. - URL: https://library.dvfu.ru/lib/document/SK_ELIB/C4E5C080-36AA-4328-8540-4D2DA491E102
. - ISBN 9781438479439 (electronic bk.). - ISBN 1438479433 (electronic bk.)
Параллельные издания: Print version: :
Содержание:
Intro -- Contents -- List of Tables -- Acknowledgments -- Introduction -- Chapter 1 Dewey's Logical Education, 1915-1937: From Lectures on the Types of Logical Theory to Logic: The Theory of Inquiry -- Part 1: Dewey's Logical Theory circa 1915 -- Part 2: Dewey's Logical Education, 1916-1924 -- Aristotle -- Mill -- Russell -- Peirce -- Klyce -- Part 3: Dewey's Logical Education, 1925-1932 -- Aristotle -- Mill -- Russell -- Peirce -- Physics and the Physicists -- Franz Boas -- Dewey's Correspondence -- Part 4: Dewey's Logical Education, 1933-1937 -- Peirce -- Dewey's Correspondence
Conclusion -- Chapter 2 Dewey's Logical Development 1916-1924 -- Traits, Meanings, and the Indeterminacy of Experiential Situations -- The 1915-1916 Types of Logical Theory -- Dewey's Correspondence -- Democracy and Education (1916) -- Reconstruction in Philosophy (1920) -- The Matrices of Inquiry: habit, language, culture -- Democracy and Education (1916) -- The Pragmatism of Peirce (1916) -- Human Nature and Conduct (1922) -- Scientific and Social inquiry -- Democracy and Education (1916) -- The Pragmatism of Peirce (1916) -- Reconstruction in Philosophy (1920)
Science, Belief, and the Public (1924) -- Forms and Propositions in Logical Theory -- The 1915-1916 Types of Logical Theory -- Dewey's Correspondence -- Logical Objects (1916) -- Concerning Novelties in Logic: A reply to Mr. Robinson (1917) -- Reconstruction in Philosophy (1920) -- Logical Method and the Law (1924) -- Conclusion -- Chapter 3 Dewey's Logical Development 1925-1932 -- Traits, Meanings, and the Indeterminacy of Experiential Situations -- Experience and Nature (1925) -- The Traits of Existence -- Meanings -- Continuity -- The 1929 introduction to Experience and Nature
The Development of American Pragmatism (1925) -- Meaning and Existence (1928) -- The Quest for Certainty (1929) -- Qualitative Thought (1930) -- The Matrices of Inquiry: habit, language, culture -- Experience and Nature (1925) -- Conduct and Experience (1930) -- Science and Social Inquiry -- Experience and Nature (1925) -- The Public and Its Problems (1927) -- 1927-1928 Types of Logical Theory -- The Quest for Certainty (1929) -- Science and Society (1931) -- Forms and Propositions in Logical Inquiry -- Dewey's Correspondence -- 1927-1928 Types of Logical Theory -- Physical Science -- Judgments
Existential Propositions and Generic Judgments -- Universal Conceptions and Universal Judgments -- Abstract Conceptions and Mathematics -- Deduction and Induction as Operations in Judging -- Induction: -- The Quest for Certainty (1929) -- Newton, Michelson-Morley, and Einstein -- Heisenberg -- Conceptions in Physical Science -- Conclusion -- Chapter 4 Dewey's Logical Development 1933-1937 -- Traits, Meanings, and the Indeterminacy of Experiential Situations -- How We Think, Second Edition (1933) -- Umbrellas are to be carried when it is raining -- If it is raining, then I will take my umbrella
Рубрики: Logic.
Доп.точки доступа:
Dewey, John,