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John Dewey's
Liberalism Individual, Community, and Self-Development Daniel Savage December 272
pages | 6 x 9 ISBN
0-8093-2410-5, $40.00s “Savage locates Dewey's conception of liberalism within current debates regarding the nature of individualism and communitarianism, especially as those debates have been articulated in the work of MacIntyre, Rawls, Rorty, Nozik, Dworkin, Sandel, and others. . . . The scholarship of the work is superior.” —Larry
Hickman, director of
the Center for Dewey Studies, Southern Illinois University Carbondale John Dewey's classical pragmatism, Daniel M. Savage
asserts, can be used to provide a self-development-based justification of
liberal democracy that shows the current debate between liberal
individualism and republican communitarianism to be based largely on a set
of pseudoproblems.
From Dewey's classical pragmatism, Savage derives a conception of individual autonomy that, while meeting all of the criteria for a conception of autonomy, does not, as the dominant Kantian variant does, require transcendence from any particular language community. The Deweyan conception of autonomy that Savage derived from classical pragmatism, in fact, requires that the individual be situated within a context of cultural beliefs. Savage argues that this particular conception of autonomy is necessary if one wants to conceive of life, as communitarians do, as a quest for the good life within a social context.
Thus, Savage constructs a conception of autonomy that consists of a
set of intellectual virtues, each of which can be understood, like
Aristotle's moral virtues, as a mean between two extremes (or vices). The
virtue of critical reflection is the mean between the vices of dogmatism
on the one hand and philosophical skepticism on the other. The virtue of
creative individuality is the mean between the opposing vices of
conformity and eccentricity. Finally, the virtue of sociability is the
mean between the extremes of docility and rebelliousness.
The three virtues together provide a natural method of adapting to
change. The method is natural because it is in accord with a continuous
cycle of activity—tension/movement/harmony—that is generic to all
living things, Dewey's method of adapting to change requires, in both the
individual and in the community, the synthesis of integrating and
differentiating forces.
Daniel M. Savage is an
assistant professor of political science at the University of Science and
Arts of Oklahoma. |
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