The later works, 1925-1953. Vol. 1, 1925
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Hailed by many scholars as the fullest expression of John Dewey's mature philosophy, Experience and Nature was his most widely reviewed and discussed work. First published in 1925, the volume encompasses Dewey's two-year expansion and development of the three lectures he had delivered as the first series of Carus Lectures. This edition includes two previously
unpublished introductions, written in the late 1940s and early 1950s, that are useful in allowing the reader to follow the changes and maturation of Dewey's thinking a quarter of a century after the book's first publication. C. E. Ayres, writing in the New Republic, said: "The simplicity of this philosophy is a simplicity not of style, but of ideas. As writing, its pattern is complicated. As thinking, it is compact, symmetrical, and clear as a March morning." In his Introduction to this volume, Sidney Hook offers a summary evaluation of the text: "Dewey's Experience and Nature is both the most suggestive and most difficult of his writings." Experience and Nature is the first of fifteen volumes in the series, The Later Works of John Dewey, 1925-1953, edited by Jo Ann Boydston and published by Southern Illinois University Press. This series is a successor to The Early Works of John Dewey, 1882-1898, and The Middle Works of John Dewey, 1899-1924. The Later Works series volumes are Modern Language Association Committee on Scholarly Editions textual editions and bear the Committee's "Approved Edition" emblem.
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Podrobná bibliografie
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Hlavní autor
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John Dewey, 1859-1952
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Další autoři
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Sidney. Hook,
Jo Ann Boydston, 1924-2011
,
Patricia. Baysinger,
Barbara. Levine,
Joseph. Ratner
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Typ dokumentu
- Knihy
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Fyzický popis
- xxiii, 409 s.
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Vydáno
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Carbondale :
Southern Illinois University Press,
c1988.
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Témata
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Popis jednotky
- "Experience and nature"--Obálka.
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ISBN
- 0-8093-0986-6
0-8093-1490-8