We are in a non-moral condition whenever we want anything intensely", ie, absolutely, so as to limit the possibilities of choice. So far I follow him ; and I should take this to mean that a man's life is imperfectly moral so far as he sacrifices any part... An Adventure in Moral Philosophy - Side 90af Warner Fite - 1926 - 276 siderFuld visning - Om denne bog
| 1917 - 926 sider
...of this view of experience, philosophy has lost hold on life. The true view of experience is that " anticipation is more primary than recollection ; projection...the past; the prospective than the retrospective." If registration of the past is not experience, then, we ask, what is experience? Dr. Dewey's answer,... | |
| 1917 - 876 sider
...of this view of experience, philosophy has lost hold on life. The true view of experience is that " anticipation is more primary than recollection ; projection...the past; the prospective than the retrospective." If registration of the past is not experience, then, we ask, what is experience? Dr. Dewey's answer,... | |
| John Dewey, Harold Chapman Brown, Addison Webster Moore, Boyd Henry Bode, George Herbert Mead, Henry Waldgrave Stuart, James Hayden Tufts, Horace Meyer Kallen - 1917 - 504 sider
...future, not on its own account: in short, because it is not, really, done with. Anticipation is therefore more primary than recollection ; projection than summoning...the past; the prospective than the retrospective. Given a world like that in which we live, a world in which environing changes are partly favorable... | |
| William Heard Kilpatrick - 1923 - 408 sider
...not on its own account: in short, because it is not, really, done with. "Anticipation is therefore more primary than recollection; projection than summoning...the past; the prospective than the retrospective. Given a world like that in which we live, a world in which environing changes are partly favorable... | |
| Warner Fite - 1925 - 342 sider
...attitude of open-mindedness. "We are in a non-moral condition whenever we want anything intensely", i. e,, absolutely, so as to limit the possibilities of choice....retrospective." This passage, from the essay in "Creative Intelligence" * states the essence, the quintessence, of the pragmatic attitude. The pragmatic attitude... | |
| Richard Bernstein - 1971 - 368 sider
...experimental attitude so fundamental to modern scientific inquiry, we realize that within experience "anticipation is ... more primary than recollection; projection than summoning of the past; the projective than the retrospective."43 The primary situations of life are those where there is something... | |
| William Andrew Paringer - 1990 - 228 sider
...nuclearization of humanity extends. We need to see that in Dewey's (and reform's) experimental attitude where "anticipation is... more primary than recollection, projection than summoning of the past, the projective than the retrospective" 8 we have come to be increasingly mesmerized by the superficial,... | |
| John Dewey - 1998 - 442 sider
...own account: in short, because it is not, really, done with. Anticipation is therefore more primarv than recollection; projection than summoning of the past; the prospective than the retrospective. Given a world like that in which we live, a world in which environing changes are partly favorable... | |
| Warner Fite - 1925 - 350 sider
...any specific end. The moral attitude will be at every moment an attitude of open-mindedness. "We are in a non-moral condition whenever we want anything...retrospective." This passage, from the essay in "Creative Intelligence" 1 states the essence, the quintessence, of the pragmatic attitude. The pragmatic attitude... | |
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