Description

Book Synopsis
Explores the connections between American pragmatism and Native American thought. This book argues that philosophical ideas and attitudes prevalent among Native Americans constituted an essential element in the development of pragmatism. It also engages questions of pluralism and cultural difference.

Trade Review

Accepting the common view that pragmatism is the uniquely American philosophy, Pratt (Univ. of Oregon) maintains that much of what American philosophy is known for can be traced to its origins in the borderlands between Europe and America and its 'originality' to well—established aspects of Native American thought. At these borderlands, he discerns the emergence of an attitude of resistance to the attitudes of European colonialism. This new attitude drove commitments to interaction, pluralism, community, and growth, the core of pragmatic thought. He plumbs Native American thought for sources of these commitments; he argues for the influence of a Native Prophetic movement on Benjamin Franklin, whose ideas in turn influenced the initial formulation of pragmatism by Peirce and James. He also asserts a prominent role for Native thought in the development of the women's movement. Readers may be skeptical regarding the extent to which Native thought shaped pragmatism, and Pratt admits that his volume is not intended as a comprehensive history, but rather as an additional perspective. Read as such, this is an interesting and insightful study of the origins of American pragmatism. For general readers and upper—division undergraduates through faculty.

-- S. C. Pearson * Choice *

. . . [T]his is an interesting and insightful study of the origins of American pragmatism. November 2002

* Choice *

Table of Contents

Contents

Acknowledgments
Introduction

1. The Problem of Origins
2. American Pragmatism
3. The Colonial Attitude
4. American Progress
5. The Indigenous Attitude
6. Welcoming the Cannibals
7. The Logic of Place
8. "This Very Ground"
9. Science and Sovereignty
10. The Logic of Home
11. Feminism and Pragmatism

Conclusion: The Legacy of Native American Thought

Notes
Works Cited
Index

Native Pragmatism

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A Paperback / softback by Scott L. Pratt

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    View other formats and editions of Native Pragmatism by Scott L. Pratt

    Publisher: Indiana University Press
    Publication Date: 01/04/2002
    ISBN13: 9780253215192, 978-0253215192
    ISBN10: 0253215196

    Description

    Book Synopsis
    Explores the connections between American pragmatism and Native American thought. This book argues that philosophical ideas and attitudes prevalent among Native Americans constituted an essential element in the development of pragmatism. It also engages questions of pluralism and cultural difference.

    Trade Review

    Accepting the common view that pragmatism is the uniquely American philosophy, Pratt (Univ. of Oregon) maintains that much of what American philosophy is known for can be traced to its origins in the borderlands between Europe and America and its 'originality' to well—established aspects of Native American thought. At these borderlands, he discerns the emergence of an attitude of resistance to the attitudes of European colonialism. This new attitude drove commitments to interaction, pluralism, community, and growth, the core of pragmatic thought. He plumbs Native American thought for sources of these commitments; he argues for the influence of a Native Prophetic movement on Benjamin Franklin, whose ideas in turn influenced the initial formulation of pragmatism by Peirce and James. He also asserts a prominent role for Native thought in the development of the women's movement. Readers may be skeptical regarding the extent to which Native thought shaped pragmatism, and Pratt admits that his volume is not intended as a comprehensive history, but rather as an additional perspective. Read as such, this is an interesting and insightful study of the origins of American pragmatism. For general readers and upper—division undergraduates through faculty.

    -- S. C. Pearson * Choice *

    . . . [T]his is an interesting and insightful study of the origins of American pragmatism. November 2002

    * Choice *

    Table of Contents

    Contents

    Acknowledgments
    Introduction

    1. The Problem of Origins
    2. American Pragmatism
    3. The Colonial Attitude
    4. American Progress
    5. The Indigenous Attitude
    6. Welcoming the Cannibals
    7. The Logic of Place
    8. "This Very Ground"
    9. Science and Sovereignty
    10. The Logic of Home
    11. Feminism and Pragmatism

    Conclusion: The Legacy of Native American Thought

    Notes
    Works Cited
    Index

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