Creativity in American Philosophy

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SUNY Press, Jan 1, 1984 - Philosophy - 299 pages
The reader will find that I combine hearty enthusiasm for the philosophical traditions of my country with sharp partial disagreement with nearly all their representatives. My effort throughout my career has been to think about philosophical, that is, essentially a priori or metaphysical, issues, using the history of ideas as a primary resource.

This is the second of two volumes dealing with the history of philosophy, especially of metaphysics. The first, Insights and Oversights of Great Thinkers, discusses some thirty European philosophers, from Democritus to Wittgenstein and Merleau-Ponty. In both volumes I try to learn and teach truth about reality by arguing, in a fashion, with those who in the past have sought such truth. Charles Hartshorne

In a remarkable tour de force, Charles Hartshorne presents a lively and illuminating study of what major American philosophers have said about creativity. With a special talent for perceiving and elegantly expressing the essence of a position, Dr. Hartshorne details his reactions to friend and foe, demonstrating that philosophy at its best is dialogue. Noting that metaphysics is a major theme in the American philosophical tradition, he states that nowhere has the topic been more persistently and searchingly investigated than in this country.
 

Selected pages

Contents

Chapter 1 From Colonial Beginnings to Philosophical Greatness
1
Chapter 2 Jonathan Edwards on God and Causality
14
Chapter 3 Some Early American Critics of Determinism
27
Ethan Allen
28
A Noble Unitarian
31
Chapter 4 Emersons Secularized Calvinism and Thoreaus Approach to Anarchism
34
Empirical Pragmatism
50
Chapter 6 Royces Mistakes and Achievements
63
B Wilmon H Sheldons Classical Theism
184
Chapter 15 Blanshards Necessitarianism
192
of the Given and His Idea of God
196
on Philosophical Systems
205
Chapter 18 Montagues Animistic Materialism and Promethean Religion
211
Chapter 19 Weiss Phenomenology of Religion
220
Chapter 20 Adlers NeoAristotelianism
229
Chapter 21 Roy Wood Sellars and Wilfrid Sellars on Quality and Structure
240

of Peirces Categories
74
Chapter 8 The DowntoEarth Activism of John Dewey
92
Chapter 9 Whiteheads Revolutionary Concept of Prehension
103
Chapter 10 Santayanas Skeptical Eclecticism
114
Chapter 11 Meads Social Psychology and Philosophy of the Present
126
Chapter 12 Hocking and Perry on Idealism
146
Chapter 13 Lewis on Memory Modality and the Given
159
Morris R Cohens Agnostic Rationalism
182
Chapter 22 Quine Philosophical Logician
245
Chapter 23 Tillichs Philosophical Theology
248
Chapter 24 Rortys Pragmatism and Farewell to the Age of Faith and Enlightenment
252
Chapter 25 Neville on Creation and Buckler on Natural Complexes
265
Chapter 26 Nozicks Indecisive Dialectic and the Meaning of Life
277
Chapter 27 Conclusion
281
Indexes
289
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About the author (1984)

Charles Hartshorne is the author of Omnipotence and Other Theological Mistakes.Whitehead s Philosophy, Creative Synthesis and Philosophic Method, A Natural Theology of Our Time, and The Logic of Perfection and Other Essays in Neoclassical Metaphysics, also published by SUNY Press. Dr. Hartshorne is past president of the Western Division of the American Philosophical Association, the Metaphysics Society of America, the Charles Peirce Society, the Society for Philosophy of Religion, and the Southern Society for Philosophy and Psychology.

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