The Truth is What Works: William James, Pragmatism, and the Seed of Death

Rowman & Littlefield Publishers (2000)
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Abstract

Charles Sanders Peirce complained that James allowed pragmatism to become "infected" with "seeds of death" like the idea that truth is mutable. The Truth is What Works is an attempt to defend James's pragmatic theory of truth from a wide range of critics including Peirce, Betrand Russell, Hilary Putnam, and Cornel West. Cormier runs the gauntlet of historical and contemporary criticism in an attempt to show, not that Jamesian pragmatism does in fact contain a perfectly good theory of objective reality after all, but rather that it doesn't, and is still a kind of realism anyway because it does not leave individuals and their subjective desires behind in an attempt to describe the real world

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Harvey Cormier
State University of New York, Stony Brook

Citations of this work

William James's politics of personal freedom.Colin Koopman - 2005 - Journal of Speculative Philosophy 19 (2):175-186.
What was James's Theory of Truth?Tom Donaldson - 2018 - In Alexander Mugar Klein, The Oxford Handbook of William James. New York, NY: Oxford University Press.
What We Talk about When We Talk about Truth: Dewey, Wittgenstein, and the Pragmatic Test.John Capps - 2021 - International Journal of Philosophical Studies 29 (2):159-180.

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