Francis Bacon and the philosophic method of the Americans

The philosophy of Francis Bacon has an important and often overlooked place in the development of American political thought. John Dewey cites Bacon as the forefather of his own highly influential philosophical school, American pragmatism. I argue that, though Dewey is in many ways correct to look t...

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Main Author: Liebeskind, Jane Louise
Format: Others
Language:en
Published: 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2152/26088
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spelling ndltd-UTEXAS-oai-repositories.lib.utexas.edu-2152-260882015-09-20T17:25:30ZFrancis Bacon and the philosophic method of the AmericansLiebeskind, Jane LouiseFrancis BaconAlexis de TocquevilleJohn DeweyScience and politicsPhilosophyPramatismThe philosophy of Francis Bacon has an important and often overlooked place in the development of American political thought. John Dewey cites Bacon as the forefather of his own highly influential philosophical school, American pragmatism. I argue that, though Dewey is in many ways correct to look to Bacon as his predecessor, he overlooks or collapses certain crucial tensions in Bacon’s philosophical project. This causes Dewey to misinterpret the political implications of the philosophic project to which he himself is an heir. By exploring the tensions that Bacon maintains, and Dewey collapses, between human knowledge and human power, science and democracy, and progress in the sciences and progress within states, I hope to shed light on the true implications of Bacon’s philosophical project for American political thought.text2014-09-22T19:53:44Z2014-052014-05-27May 20142014-09-22T19:53:44ZThesisapplication/pdfhttp://hdl.handle.net/2152/26088en
collection NDLTD
language en
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Francis Bacon
Alexis de Tocqueville
John Dewey
Science and politics
Philosophy
Pramatism
spellingShingle Francis Bacon
Alexis de Tocqueville
John Dewey
Science and politics
Philosophy
Pramatism
Liebeskind, Jane Louise
Francis Bacon and the philosophic method of the Americans
description The philosophy of Francis Bacon has an important and often overlooked place in the development of American political thought. John Dewey cites Bacon as the forefather of his own highly influential philosophical school, American pragmatism. I argue that, though Dewey is in many ways correct to look to Bacon as his predecessor, he overlooks or collapses certain crucial tensions in Bacon’s philosophical project. This causes Dewey to misinterpret the political implications of the philosophic project to which he himself is an heir. By exploring the tensions that Bacon maintains, and Dewey collapses, between human knowledge and human power, science and democracy, and progress in the sciences and progress within states, I hope to shed light on the true implications of Bacon’s philosophical project for American political thought. === text
author Liebeskind, Jane Louise
author_facet Liebeskind, Jane Louise
author_sort Liebeskind, Jane Louise
title Francis Bacon and the philosophic method of the Americans
title_short Francis Bacon and the philosophic method of the Americans
title_full Francis Bacon and the philosophic method of the Americans
title_fullStr Francis Bacon and the philosophic method of the Americans
title_full_unstemmed Francis Bacon and the philosophic method of the Americans
title_sort francis bacon and the philosophic method of the americans
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/2152/26088
work_keys_str_mv AT liebeskindjanelouise francisbaconandthephilosophicmethodoftheamericans
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