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         Dewey John:     more books (100)
  1. John Dewey (S U N Y Series in Philosophy of Education) by Raymond D. Boisvert, 2007-08-28
  2. The Education of John Dewey by Jay Martin, 2003-02-15
  3. John Dewey and the Art of Teaching: Toward Reflective and Imaginative Practice by Douglas J. Simpson, Michael J. B. Jackson, et all 2004-12-15
  4. Young John Dewey: An Essay in American Intellectual History by Neil Coughlan, 1975-10
  5. Dewey's Enduring Impact: Essays on America's Philosopher by John R. Shook, Paul Kurtz, 2010-12-14
  6. Teachers, Leaders, and Schools: Essays by John Dewey
  7. Dewey's Empirical Theory of Knowledge and Reality (The Vanderbilt Library of American Philosophy) by John R. Shook, 2000-02-16
  8. John Dewey and Moral Imagination: Pragmatism in Ethics by Steven Fesmire, 2003-08-14
  9. John Dewey and Moral Imagination: Pragmatism in Ethics by Steven Fesmire, 2003-08-14
  10. John Dewey and the Challenge of Classroom Practice (Practitioner Inquiry Series) by Stephen M. Fishman, Lucille McCarthy, 1998-05-01
  11. John Dewey: The Philosopher of Education for Our Time? (Continuum Library of Educational Thought, Volume 4) by Richard Pring, 2007-01-15
  12. John Dewey (Peter Lang Primer) by Douglas J. Simpson, 2006-02-24
  13. Inquiry And Education: John Dewey And the Quest for Democracy (S U N Y Series in Philosophy of Education) by James Scott Johnston, 2006-04-20
  14. John Dewey in Perspective. by George Raymond Geiger, 1974-10-04

61. Dewey John From FOLDOC
Dewey John. history of philosophy, biography educated in his native Vermont and at Johns Hopkins University, John Dewey (18591952) enjoyed a lengthy career
http://www.swif.uniba.it/lei/foldop/foldoc.cgi?Dewey John

62. JOHN DEWEY: A COMMON FAITH
John Dewey A COMMON FAITH 18591952. A Celebration in Manhattan. John Dewey was not a member but was a close friend of the Unitarian movement.
http://www.harvardsquarelibrary.org/unitarians/dewey.html
Recommended Reading Notable Unitarians Home Harvard Square Library Home
JOHN DEWEY: A COMMON FAITH
A Celebration in Manhattan
Max Otto of the University of Wisconsin, be the speaker. John Dewey
by Max Otto
Toward sundown on the first day of June, the thing happened that had to happen sooner or later. The life of John Dewey came to a close. He had remained singularly active, not only in body but in mind and heart and spirit, more than a score of years after reaching the officially designated termination of professional effectiveness and the traditionally announced ending of the possibility of finding life enjoyable. But it is not granted to any man to live forever.
It is being said in newspaper reports, in editorials, in conversations across the country, that such a life cannot end; that John Dewey lives on and will live on down the long stretch of time.
Dewey early in his career at Columbia University (The Dewey Papers, Special Collections, Morris Library, Southern Illinois University-Carbondale)

63. Cantervill's De La Filosofía
Translate this page de la Europa medieval. John Dewey (1859-1952). La memoria es una viscicitudes y sus perturbaciones. John Dewey (1859-1952). El hombre no vive
http://www.cantervill.com.ar/fyp/z-fil3.htm
window.status="de la Filosofía" de la Filosofía Página 3 de 3 El alma es aquello por lo que vivimos, sentimos y pensamos. Aristóteles
(384-322) Filósofo griego. El cuerpo es el instrumento del alma. Aristóteles
(384-322) Filósofo griego. El imitar es connatural al hombre. Aristóteles
(384-322) Filósofo griego. Lo que vi bajo la reflexión psicológica 'mi observación', lo veo bajo la reflexión trascendental como... objetivado por el 'yo' trascendental. Edmund Husserl
El mundo nace en nosotros, como Descartes hizo reconocer, y dentro de nosotros adquiere su influencia habitual. Edmund Husserl
Lo experimentado como externo no pertenece a los 'interno' intencional, aunque nuestra experiencia de ello resida allí, como experiencia de lo externo. Edmund Husserl
El juicio, la valoración, la pretensión, no son experiencias vacías que la conciencia tiene... sino experiencias compuestas de una corriente intencional. Edmund Husserl
En vez de los objetos en sí mismos, de los valores, fines, etcétera, consideremos las experiencias subjetivas en las que 'aparecen'. Edmund Husserl
La psicología fenomenológica debe su nombre a los 'fenómenos', de cuyo aspecto psicológico se ocupa.

64. Society, Philosophy, Philosophers, D: Dewey, John
John Dewey, 18591952. American philosopher known for his writings on education. He was influenced both by Hegel and by the English Pragmatist William James.
http://www.combose.com/Society/Philosophy/Philosophers/D/Dewey,_John/
Top Society Philosophy Philosophers ... Dewey, John
Related links of interest:

65. John Dewey Online Newspaper Articles
..By Arkady Leokum Interesting people John Dewey (Win an illustrated Tell Me Why book ..the author will decide the winner.) John Dewey (18591952) was an
http://www.newspaperarchive.com/topics/john_dewey/default.html

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Browse Papers Register Online Forum ... Services SEARCH MILLIONS OF NEWSPAPER ARTICLES: advanced search var zflag_nid="167"; var zflag_cid="263/262"; var zflag_sid="103"; var zflag_width="120"; var zflag_height="600"; var zflag_sz="8";
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John Dewey Online Newspaper Articles NewspaperARCHIVE.com presents a selection of newspapers from our archive. This search was done on the following keywords: SEARCH FOR:
FREE RESULTS:
Berkshire Evening Eagle
...for several years. Mr. Strizzi John Dewey 's Theories Soiled by the Inept By.....and died the other day at 92. This was John Dewey , one of the few great thinkers of.....t. And aren't. And doubtless won't be. John Dewey was the father of what is loosely.....In the half-century of popularity for John Dewey 's credo of education. His advanced.. Pittsfield, Massachusetts Friday, June 06, 1952
Gleaner
...By Arkady Leokum Interesting people

66. Great Books And Classics - John Dewey
AZ). Selected Reading List All Works ? Change Selected Language All Change. Author Chronological, John Dewey (1859-1952),
http://www.grtbooks.com/dewey.asp?idx=0&yr=1859

67. Great Books And Classics - John Dewey
Title (AZ). Selected Reading List All Works ? Change Selected Language All Change. Title Chronological, John Dewey (1859-1952),
http://www.grtbooks.com/dewey.asp?idx=3&yr=1908

68. The Philosophy Of John Dewey
I. Life and Works. John Dewey (18591952) (picture) was a philosopher, psychologist, and educator. As an educator he is famous for
http://radicalacademy.com/phildewey.htm
Classic Philosophers The Great Thinkers of Western Philosophy Academy Resources Glossary of Philosophical Terms Philosophy Search Engine Timeline of Philosophy A Timeline of American Philosophy ... Books about Religion in The Radical Academy Bookstore Shop Amazon Stores in the Radical Academy Bookstore
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The Philosophy of John Dewey (with critical notes) TABLE OF CONTENTS I.
II.

III.

IV.
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Social and Educational Applications
I. Life and Works
John Dewey (1859-1952) ( picture ) was a philosopher, psychologist, and educator. As an educator he is famous for his system of teaching through experimental observation (progressive system in education); as a philosopher he is known for the new development which he gave to James's Pragmatism. Dewey and his colleagues formed a strong pragmatic center at the University of Chicago, and when Dewey moved to Columbia University, he created a strong pragmatic center there. In these two universities many philosophers received their training.

69. AMERICAN PHILOSOPHY: American Pragmatism - 2
Select John Dewey. AMERICAN PRAGMATISM 2. John Dewey (1859-1952). John Dewey (picture), a philosopher, educator, and psychologist
http://radicalacademy.com/amphilosophy7a.htm
Adventures in Philosophy AMERICAN PHILOSOPHY Select a Category... Ancient Philosophy Medieval Philosophy Modern Philosophy Recent Philosophy American Philosophy Islamic Philosophy Jewish Philosophy Political Philosophy American Philosophy Index Academy Resources Glossary of Philosophical Terms Philosophy Search Engine Timeline of Philosophy A Timeline of American Philosophy ... Books about Religion in The Radical Academy Bookstore Shop Amazon Stores in the Radical Academy Bookstore
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Select: John Dewey AMERICAN PRAGMATISM - 2 John Dewey John Dewey ( picture Overview Dewey graduated from the University of Vermont in 1879 and received his Ph.D. from Johns Hopkins University in 1884. One of his teachers was G. Stanley Hall, a founder of experimental psychology; another was Charles S. Peirce. Dewey, however, was particularly disposed to German philosophic thought, especially the unifying, organic character of the idealism of Hegel, in contrast to British empiricism. Dewey first taught philosophy at the University of Michigan (1884-88), and then at the University of Minnesota (1888), and subsequently returned to Michigan (1889-94). In 1894 he became chairman of the department of philosophy, psychology, and pedagogy at the University of Chicago. His influential classic

70. Mr John Dewey, Född 1859
1217 FÖRETAGSEKONOMISKA LÄROMEDEL. För 100 år sedan skrev John Dewey (1859-1952) följande The subject of compound-business
http://w1.861.telia.com/~u86113747/globe/Dewey.html
EE:s globalsida BOKFÖRING internlänkar CENTRAL ... hem 0
Was John Dewey gesagt hat
Om läromedel - speciellt min seminarieuppsats i metodik vid HLS, 1978-12-17: FÖRETAGSEKONOMISKA LÄROMEDEL För 100 år sedan skrev John Dewey (1859-1952) följande: Källa: Dewey on Education, Selections with an Introduction and Notes by Martin S Dworkin, Teachers college pre (1967) page 79 and more pages Bl.a. hade jag kassarabatter i åtanke när jag - för tjugo år sedan - skrev min uppsats och tillät mig citera en amerikansk professor som varit död i 50 år. Men det var inte bara detta. Jag skrev då: .. målsättningen för verksamheten har inte alltid stått klar för mig. Jag citerar en Arne Halldén (Skolvärlden 36/1978) som kärnfullt och krasst skrev "Lärarens jobb är att undervisa". Traditionellt sett är detta detsamma som att förmedla kunskapsinehåll till eleven (Ola Halldén, Fackläraren 22/1975). Att detta innhåll måste anpassas till elevens sätt att tänka, till elevens intresse och erfarenheter, har Dewey understrukit. I annat fall blir undervisningen " not education but indoctrination, propaganda

71. Tenkte Tanker: John Dewey, 1859-1952
Tenkte tanker John Dewey, 18591952. I forrige århundre utviklet Amerika seg fra å være en provinsmakt til å bli Verdensmakten.
http://www.logistikk-ledelse.no/2003/kv/kv08-03.htm
Tenkte tanker: John Dewey, 1859-1952 I forrige århundre utviklet Amerika seg fra å være en provinsmakt til å bli Verdensmakten. Kommersiell utvikling og europeisk immigrasjon bidro til at amerikanerne etter hvert styrket sin egen livs-filosofi, f.eks. med utgangspunkt i Descartes, Spinoza, Hegel, Hume og Peirce, ja, men uten John Dewey ville ikke nåtidens kanskje mest typiske amerikanske filosofi, pragmatismen, fått den betydning, den livskraft, den etter hvert har fått. Stein Smaaland «Dewey, Wittgenstein og Heidegger er 1900-tallets tre viktigste filosofer» (Richard Rorty, amerikansk filosof). Dewey hadde et sterkt fokus på erfaringenes grunnleggende betydning for vår kunnskap. Tradisjonelt hadde kunnskap vært en passiv innsamling av data etterfulgt av en kontroll om data stemte overens med vår teori. Dewey så, imidlertid, kunnskap som en proaktiv handling som forutså og rettledet våre tilpasninger til fremtidige opplevelser og interaksjoner med omgivelsene. Han står bak tesen: «learning by doing». Dewey så konsepter - teorier, metoder o.s.v. - som rene verktøy, rene instrumenter, for vår håndtering av den verden vi opplever rundt oss, og kalte følgelig sin filosofi for instrumentalisme, jfr. «Definisjon av filosofi».

72. Anti-Dewey Page
John Dewey. John Dewey (18591952) remains an extremely influential thinker whose thought sums up important trends in American life.
http://jkalb.org/webpages/antidewey_page.php
Anti-Dewey Page
Critical views on his thought and influence
John Dewey
John Dewey (1859-1952) remains an extremely influential thinker whose thought sums up important trends in American life. Many oppose his thought and the trends it favors. He wrote a huge amount (his collected works run to 37 volumes) and frequently expressed himself unclearly or outright contradicted himself. Perhaps as a consequence, too many criticisms of Dewey are uninformed. There are good grounds for criticizing him, however, and the purpose of this page is to help people do so. I turned up the materials in the course of working on my own critical analysis of Dewey's philosophy, and thought it might help others to make them available on the web. The issues presented here can be discussed on the discussion board Pro et Contra . Your participation is welcome. You can also participate in developing these ideas in my wiki, Tradition, Catholicism and the World email the author, Jim Kalb , or add a comment at the foot of this page.
Resources
Here are resources critical of Dewey and his philosophy:
General

73. John Dewey
John Dewey (18591952). John Dewey was, during the first half of the 20th century, America s most prominent philosopher. He was among
http://www.siena.edu/boisvert/Dewey.htm
John Dewey (1859-1952) the philosopher of democracy. In the ellipse of Dewey's philosophy, democracy, its understanding, reinforcement and elaboration occupies the other focus. Several traits stand out as the frame and threads out of which he wove his philosophical grasp of things. 1. ReformationDewey was an heir to the Protestant Reformation tradition. With him, this meant that the inheritance of the past, no matter how valuable in certain respects, could always be improved. Change, reform, and the word that came to be associated with him "reconstruction" were constant concerns. He had a keen sense of how precarious were human achievements, and how easily one generation's liberating reforms could be the next generation's limiting conditions. 2. The SocialAlthough an empiricist, Dewey was not, as was Locke, an atomist in any sense. His most fundamental philosophical category, that which can most securely be applied to the nature of things, was the "social." Dewey had an organic, biological sense about the nature of things. Nothing exists in isolation. Everything is enmeshed in multiple and overlapping interrelations. "Individuality," the unique contributions each of us can make, was a Deweyan ideal as opposed to "individualism," the attempt to define and establish ourselves apart from our connections to others. 3. Growthbecause of the great variety of individuals, it is impossible to fix a certain goal as

74. Zeal.com - Site Profile For Internet Encyclopedia Of Philosophy - John Dewey (18
Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy John Dewey (1859-1952) Profile, Edit value 75. Title, Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy - John Dewey (1859-1952).
http://zeal.com/website/profile.jhtml?cid=898179&wid=975386

75. Past Masters Series - The Correspondence Of John Dewey
Larry Hickman, Editor. This database contains a comprehensive electronic collection of letters to, from, and about John Dewey (18591952).
http://www.pdcnet.org/pmcorrdewey.html
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The Correspondence of John Dewey
Larry Hickman, Editor This database contains a comprehensive electronic collection of letters to, from, and about John Dewey (1859-1952). The collection has been assembled in chronological order, and is being published in three volumes. Two of the three volumes have been published and are currently available in electronic format. The third is scheduled for publication in late 2003. Volume 1 : 1871-1918. Includes letters of Dewey's family and the family of his first wife, Alice Chipman; Dewey's graduate school years and his years at the University of Michigan and the University of Minnesota; his marriage and family life; his decade at the University of Chicago and the founding of the "Dewey School"; his move to Columbia University; his role as a founder of the American Association of University Professors; and his political activities during World War One. Volume 2 : 1919-1939. Includes correspondence pertaining to Dewey's lectures in Japan and China; his visits to Turkey, Mexico, and the Soviet Union; the death of his wife Alice; his first retirement from Columbia University; his activism during the Great Depression; his role as chair of the Trotsky inquiry; and his second retirement from Columbia University. Volume 3 (scheduled to be published in Fall 2003): 1940-1953. Includes correspondence pertaining to his defense of academic freedom during World War Two and the Cold War; his defense of Bertrand Russell; his second marriage to Roberta Lowitz Grant; his ninetieth birthday celebration; his death in 1952; and the correspondence that followed.

76. Educational Theory Of John Dewey
Dewey's theory of education analyzed into eight factors. Sources C.C. Dewey, J. The Child and the Curriculum
http://www.newfoundations.com/GALLERY/Dewey.html
The Educational Theory of John Dewey (1859 - 1952).
Analyst: N. I. Emand Analyst: Sarah Fraser (DE2) RETURN
Theory of Value
: What knowledge and skills are worthwhile learning? What are the goals of education? D.E: The term "value" has two quite different meanings. On the one hand, it denotes the attitude of prizing a thing, finding it worth while, for its own sake, or intrinsically This is a name for a full or complete experience. To value in this sense is to appreciate. But to value also means a distinctly intellectual act-an operation of comparing and judging to evaluate. This occurs when direct full experience is lacking, and the question arises which of the various possibilities of a situation is to be preferred in order to reach a full realization, or vital experience. 291-292 P.M: Values that are "extrinsic" or instrumental may be rationally estimated. For they are only means; are not ends in any genuine sense. As means their efficacy may be determined by methods that will stand scientific inspection. But the "ends" they serve (ends which are truly ends) are just matters of what groups, classes, sects, races, or whatever, happen irrationally to like or dislike. 9 Q.C: Of the many consequences that result, the state of education is perhaps the most significant. As the means of the general institution of intelligent action, it holds the key to orderly social reconstruction. 252

77. John Dewey And Informal Education
John Dewey (1859 1952) has made, arguably, the most significant contribution to the development of educational thinking in the twentieth century.
http://www.infed.org/thinkers/et-dewey.htm
encyclopaedia archives search
john dewey
Arguably the most influential thinker on education in the twentieth century, Dewey's contribution lies along several fronts. His attention to experience and reflection, democracy and community, and to environments for learning have been seminal.
(This 'John Dewey' page is due to be extended). John Dewey (1859 - 1952) has made, arguably, the most significant contribution to the development of educational thinking in the twentieth century. Dewey's philosophical pragmatism, concern with interaction, reflection and experience, and interest in community and democracy, were brought together to form a highly suggestive educative form. John Deweyis often misrepresented - and wrongly associated with child-centred education. In many respects his work cannot be easily slotted into any one of the curriculum traditions that have dominated north American and UK schooling traditions over the last century. However, John Dewey's influence can be seen in many of the writers that have influenced the development of informal education over the same period. For example, Coyle, Kolb, Lindeman and Rogers drew extensively on his work. John Dewey's significance for informal educators lays in a number of areas. First, his belief that education must engage with and enlarge experience has continued to be a significant strand in informal education practice. Second, and linked to this, Dewey's exploration of thinking and reflection - and the associated role of educators - has continued to be an inspiration. We can see it at work, for example, in the models developed by writers such as David Boud and Donald Schön. Third, his concern with interaction and environments for learning provide a continuing framework for practice. Last, his passion for democracy, for educating so that all may share in a common life, provides a strong rationale for practice in the associational settings in which informal educators work.

78. Southern Illinois University Carbondale
Center for Dewey Studies. Home. What Is the Dewey Center? What's New? Collection Resources Audio Sample. Video. John Dewey His Life and Work
http://www.siu.edu/~deweyctr
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79. John Dewey Discussion List
John Dewey Discussion List, hosted at the University of South Carolina John Dewey DISCUSSION LIST. DeweyL is an international interpretation and extension of John Dewey's philosophy. The list is to the writings and philosophy of John Dewey as possible
http://www.cla.sc.edu/phil/faculty/burket/dewey-l.html
JOHN DEWEY DISCUSSION LIST DEWEY-L is an international electronic forum devoted to the interpretation and extension of John Dewey's philosophy. The list is open to anyone with an interest in any facet of Dewey's philosophy. The broad aims of the list are to explore the merits of Dewey's philosophy, including its relations to any and all developments in philosophy and in other areas of inquiry which relate to the spirit of Dewey's work. TECHNICAL INFORMATION DOs AND DON'Ts LIST MANAGER TOP ... DEWEY-L ARCHIVES TECHNICAL INFORMATION You may participate in Dewey-L discussions [ ] using the Dewey-L web site and/or [ ] using email. [1] The web interface for the Dewey-L forum includes facilities for joining or leaving the list, and for reading and posting messages. To use many if not any of the web-based facilities, you will need to establish a server password. When prompted to login with a password, read the brief instructions on that page and follow the "get a new LISTSERV password" link. un check the "Mail delivery disabled temporarily" check-box.

80. The John Dewey Society
The John Dewey Society. for the Study of Education of Higher Level Predicates , John Dewey's Pragmatic Technology , and Philosophical Collected Works of John Dewey, as well as the
http://cuip.uchicago.edu/jds
The John Dewey Society for the Study of Education and Culture
JohnDeweySociety.Org
JDS Home Page Contact Information Becoming a Member ... Links
JDS Home Page
"I believe that education is the fundamental method of social progress and reform. All reforms which rest simply upon the law, or the threatening of certain penalties, or upon changes in mechanical or outward arrangements, are transitory and futile.... But through education society can formulate its own purposes, can organize its own means and resources, and thus shape itself with definiteness and economy in the direction in which it wishes to move.... Education thus conceived marks the most perfect and intimate union of science and art conceivable in human experience."
John Dewey, My Pedagogic Creed
The address of this website is now " http://JohnDeweySociety.Org ."
Notes from President David Hansen: I am pleased to announce the results of our recent elections:
* Our President-Elect, who will begin his two-year term of office at AERA 2005 in Montreal, is Professor Larry Hickman. Larry is Director of the Center for Dewey Studies and Professor of Philosophy at Southern Illinois University in Carbondale, Illinois. He is the author of many books including Modern Theories of Higher Level Predicates , John Dewey's Pragmatic Technology , and Philosophical Tools for Technological Culture . He has edited books such as Technology as a Human Affair , Reading Dewey , and The Essential Dewey (with Thomas Alexander). He is also editor of the electronic edition of the Collected Works of John Dewey, as well as the first two of what will be three volumes of the electronic edition of Dewey's Correspondence. Larry will bring to his Presidency of the Society his outstanding scholarly presence and his long-standing leadership, nationally and internationally, in Dewey studies.

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