Bültmann & Gerriets
The Person Vanishes
John Dewey¿s Philosophy of Experience and the Self
von Yoram Lubling
Verlag: Peter Lang
Reihe: American University Studies Nr. 206
Gebundene Ausgabe
ISBN: 978-1-4331-0608-8
Erschienen am 10.02.2011
Sprache: Englisch
Format: 231 mm [H] x 155 mm [B] x 20 mm [T]
Gewicht: 556 Gramm
Umfang: 288 Seiten

Preis: 91,55 €
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Klappentext
Biografische Anmerkung

The Person Vanishes argues that despite John Dewey¿s failure to articulate «an adequate theory of personality», his writings provide at least a theory-sketch of human personality consistent with the assumptions that framed his philosophical outlook. Recognizing the new developments in society, science, and the arts, Dewey argues for the necessity of a Copernican revolution in our understanding of the human self; from the monadic and minimalist self of the Cartesian-Newtonian modernist tradition to a relational and processual model of selfhood consonant with the press of post-modernist historical experience. As a field and activity conception, Dewey¿s self emerges as a nexus of relational energizing, genuinely moored in a cultural surrounding in which ongoing creative reconstruction becomes the mark and criterion of the self¿s health and growth. What vanishes in Dewey¿s reconstruction is not the self as such, but only the entitative, substantive self of early modernism.
Dewey¿s understanding of the self is grounded in the conviction that philosophy must begin its inquiry from the ordinary experience of plain men and women. The Person Vanishes examines Dewey¿s participatory notion of deliberation, what he calls «dramatic rehearsal», by using the Israeli-Palestinian conflict as a case study. The analysis attempts to cash out the personal and collective habits, as well as the different modalities of ends, facts, and values that diagram the existential dimensions of this problematic situation. Contrary to traditional dualistic and spectatorial accounts of deliberation, Dewey¿s «dramatic rehearsal» shows the complexity of decision-making when the genuine limitations of daily life are taken seriously. The attempt to march to Dewey¿s participatory philosophy reveals the escapist nature of all dualistic philosophical traditions and the reason for their continuous failure to resolve concrete social and personal conflicts.



Yoram Lubling is Professor of Philosophy at Elon University, North Carolina. He is a native of the State of Israel and a second-generation Holocaust survivor. Dr. Lubling is the author of Twice-Dead: Moshe Y. Lubling, the Ethics of Memory, and the Treblinka Revolt (Lang, 2007), as well as numerous book chapters and journal articles on classical American philosophy, John Dewey, Martin Buber, active pedagogy, aesthetics, Holocaust studies, Jewish philosophy, and the history of Modern Zionism.


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