02446nam a22002177a 45000010005000000070003000050080042000080200015000500200018000650820015000831000019000982450068001172600037001853000021002225050593002435201321008366500041021578500008021989420008022069980014022146376tz151020t th ||||| |||| 00|10 eng dd a0199260168 a9780199260164 a191bK691H aKuklick, Bruce aA history of philosophy in america, 1720-2000 /cBruce Kuklick. a[S.l.] :bClarendon Press,c2003 a328 p. ;c24 cm. aPart I Speculative Thought in America, 1720-1868 -- 1 Calvinism and Jonathan Edwards -- 2 Philosophy and Politics -- 3 Theological Dispute -- 4 Collegiate Philosophy -- 5 Innovative Amateurs -- Part II The Age of Pragmatism -- 6 The Shape of Revolution -- 7 The Consensus on Idealiam, 1870-1900 -- 8 Pragmatism in Cambridge -- 9 Pragmatism at Harvard -- 10 Instrumentalism in Chicago and New Work -- Part III Professional Philosophy, 1912-2000 -- 11 Professional Realism -- 12 Europe's Impact on the United States -- 13 Harvard and Oxford -- 14 The Tribulations of Professional Philosopht aHere at last is the only up-to-date history of American philosophy, an American counterpart to Bertrand Russell's History of Western Philosophy . In this fascinating volume, the eminent historian Bruce Kuklick tells the story of the growth of philosophical thinking in the United States, in the context of intellectual and social change. He sketches the genesis of these intellectual practices in New England Calvinism and the writing of Jonathan Edwards. He discusses theology in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries and the origins of collegiate philosophy in the early part of the nineteenth century. We see the development of secular preconceptions and the emergence, after Darwin's writings of the mid-late nineteenth century, of forms of thought hostile to religion. All of the great American thinkers are portrayed and their contributions to philosophy assessed--from Charles Peirce to William James, John Dewey to C. I. Lewis, and Wilfrid Sellars to W. V. Quine. The work brings us right up to date with the first historical treatment of the period after pragmatism, and the fragmentation of philosophy in the second half of the twentieth century. The author steers a controversial course between the divergent views that historians and philosophers take of the significance of philosophy in recent years. aPhilosophyzUnited States of America aMBU aCL2 anarongrit