William James’s scientific contributions

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Publications (1)


Pragmatism: A New Name for Some Old Ways of Thinking
  • Book

October 2014

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96 Reads

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443 Citations

William James

One of the great American pragmatic philosophers alongside Peirce and Dewey, William James (1842–1910) delivered these eight lectures in Boston and New York in the winter of 1906–7. Though he credits Peirce with coining the term 'pragmatism', James highlights in his subtitle that this 'new name' describes a philosophical temperament as old as Socrates. The pragmatic approach, he says, takes a middle way between rationalism's airy principles and empiricism's hard facts. James' pragmatism is both a method of interpreting ideas by their practical consequences and an epistemology which identifies truths according to their useful outcomes. Furnished with many examples, the lectures illustrate pragmatism's response to classic problems such as the question of free will versus determinism. Published in 1907, this work further develops James's approach to religion and morality, introduced in The Will to Believe (1897) and The Varieties of Religious Experience (1902), both reissued in this series.

Citations (1)


... However, its belief in the lack of moral truth and objectivity, and its emphasis on emotion and intuition in decision making magnify subjectivism and relativist dialectics, which renders virtue a morally relativistic matter, and how they approach economic life is quite different from what Plato or Aristotle supported so they are misrepresented (Koehn 2020). Pragmatism's strength lies in its flexibility, particularly in dynamic and complex environments (James 1911(James , 1916. However, its relativistic stance and reliance on social norms have drawn criticism for lacking ethical consistency and potentially favoring dominant social values over objective moral concerns. ...

Reference:

Making Wiser Decisions in Organizations: Insights from Inter-Processual Self Theory and Transcendental Anthropology
Pragmatism: A New Name for Some Old Ways of Thinking
  • Citing Book
  • October 2014