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William James

wm_james.jpg

William James (January 11, 1842, New York - August 26, 1910 Chocorua, New Hampshire), philosopher and elder brother of the writer Henry James, was born in New York. He studied in France and taught at Harvard until his death. Together with Charles Sanders Pierce, who coined the term, James founded the philosophical school or (perhaps more accurately) orientation of pragmatism. James was not trained as a philosopher, but rather as a psychologist, at the time when the two disciplines were only beginning to separate themselves. He was in fact one of the first laboratory psychologists in America, though he was also skeptical of the ultimate value of laboratories for understanding the human mind.

James's was a markedly pluralistic and relativistic philosophy, even for a pragmatist's. While, like pragmatists generally, he held experimentation to be a way of life, he did not look to it for objective knowledge. Unlike John Dewey, James had no problem with people holding widely divergent views of the world, each on the basis of their own experience.

James also did important work in the study and philosophy of religion, providing a wide-ranging account of The Varieties of Religious Experience (1902) and interpreting them according to his pragmatic leanings. Some of the important claims he makes in this regard:

  • Religious genius should be the primary topic in the study of religion, rather than religious institutions--since institutions are merely the remnant of genius.
  • The intense, even pathological varieties of experience (religious or otherwise) should be sought by psychologists, because they represent the closest thing to a microscope of the mind--that is, they show us in drastically enlarged form the normal processes of things.
  • In order to usefully interpret the realm of common, shared experience and history, we must each make certain "over-beliefs" in things which, while they cannot be proven on the basis of experience, help us to live fuller and better lives.

Referenced By

1902 in literature | 1910 in literature | Albert Bandura | Alfred Schutz | Alfred Schütz | American Modern Library | Biographical Listing/J | Bishop of Durham | C. S. Peirce | Charles Peirce | Charles S. Peirce | Charles Sanders Peirce | Charles Sanders Pierce | Doggerel | Evolutionary economics | Evolutionary economics&actionedit | Fechner | George Santayana | Gifford Lectures | Gilded Generation | Gustav Fechner | Gustav Theodor Fechner | Hanlon's Law | Hanlon's Razor | Hanlons Razor | Harvard | Harvard College | Harvard University | Henri Bergson | Henry James | John Dewey | John Mack | Jorge Augustín Nicolás Ruiz de Santayana | Jorge Santayana | List of people by name: J | List of philosophical topics (I-Q) | List of psychological topics | List of psychologists | Modern Library | NaiveRelativismAboutTruth | Naive relativism about truth | Never attribute to malice that which can be adequately explained by stupidity | Phsycology | Physcology | Pragmaticism | Pragmatism | Pragmatist | Psychological | Psychology | Psychology basic topics | Pyhscology | Robert Herrick (novelist) | Shadworth Hodgson | SocialSciences | Social Science | Social Sciences | Stream of consciousness | Supernatural | Supernaturalism | Techno-thriller | TheoriesOfTruth | Transpersonal psychology | True | Truth | Walter Lippmann

 

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This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "William James".

 

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