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The Collected Works of John Dewey: PergamonMedia

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This comprehensive eBook presents the complete works or all the significant works - the Œuvre - of this famous and brilliant writer in one ebook - 5870 pages easy-to-read and • Democracy and An Introduction to the Philosophy of Education• How We Think• Moral Principles in Education• The Child and the Curriculum• Human Nature and Conduct• Creative Essays in the Pragmatic Attitude, James Hayden Tufts, Addison Webster Moore, Harold Chapman Brown, George H. Mead, Boyd Henry Bode, Henry Waldgrave Stuart, and Horace Meyer Kallen• Reconstruction in Philosophy• Leibniz's New Essays Concerning the Human Understanding• Ethics and James Hayden Tufts• Psychology and Social Practice• Studies in Logical Theory• Letters from China and Japan and Harriet Alice Chipman Dewey• Essays in Experimental Logic• German philosophy and politics• China, Japan and the U.S.A.• etc.

3108 pages, Kindle Edition

First published February 7, 2014

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About the author

John Dewey

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John Dewey was an American philosopher, psychologist and educational reformer whose ideas have been influential in education and social reform. Dewey, along with Charles Sanders Peirce and William James, is recognized as one of the founders of the philosophy of pragmatism and of functional psychology. He was a major representative of the progressive and progressive populist philosophies of schooling during the first half of the 20th century in the USA.

In 1859, educator and philosopher John Dewey was born in Burlington, Vermont. He earned his doctorate at Johns Hopkins University in 1884. After teaching philosophy at the University of Michigan, he joined the University of Chicago as head of a department in philosophy, psychology and education, influenced by Darwin, Freud and a scientific outlook. He joined the faculty of Columbia University in 1904. Dewey's special concern was reform of education. He promoted learning by doing rather than learning by rote. Dewey conducted international research on education, winning many academic honors worldwide. Of more than 40 books, many of his most influential concerned education, including My Pedagogic Creed (1897), Democracy and Education (1902) and Experience and Education (1938). He was one of the founders of the philosophy of pragmatism. A humanitarian, he was a trustee of Jane Addams' Hull House, supported labor and racial equality, and was at one time active in campaigning for a third political party. He chaired a commission convened in Mexico City in 1937 inquiring into charges made against Leon Trotsky during the Moscow trials. Raised by an evangelical mother, Dewey had rejected faith by his 30s. Although he disavowed being a "militant" atheist, when his mother complained that he should be sending his children to Sunday school, he replied that he had gone to Sunday School enough to make up for any truancy by his children. As a pragmatist, he judged ideas by the results they produced. As a philosopher, he eschewed an allegiance to fixed and changeless dogma and superstition. He belonged to humanist societies, including the American Humanist Association. D. 1952.

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