At the turn of the twentieth century, no other public intellectual was as celebrated in America as the influential philosopher and psychologist William James. Sought after around the country, James developed his ideas in lecture halls and via essays and books intended for general audiences. Reaching out to and connecting with these audiences was crucial to James—so crucial that in 1903 he identified “popular statement,” or speaking and writing in a way that animated the thought of popular audiences, as the “highest form of art.” Paul Stob’s thought-provoking history traces James’s art of popular statement through pivotal lectures, essays, and books, including his 1878 lectures in Baltimore and Boston, “Talks to Teachers on Psychology,” “The Varieties of Religious Experience,” and “Pragmatism.” The book explores James’s unique approach to public address, which involved crafting lectures in science, religion, and philosophy around ordinary people and their experiences. With democratic bravado, James confronted those who had accumulated power through various systems of academic and professional authority, and argued that intellectual power should be returned to the people. Stob argues that James gave those he addressed a central role in the pursuit of knowledge and fostered in them a new intellectual curiosity unlike few scholars before or since.
The book explores James's unique approach to public address, which involved crafting lectures in science, religion, and philosophy around ordinary people and their experiences.
Service Learning and Literary Studies in English. New York: Modern Language Association of America. Kindle edition. Hicks, Scott. 2015. “Reliving and Remaking the Harlem Renaissance.” In Service Learning and Literary Studies, ...
Menand, in his study of the origins of pragmatist thought, sees a full-fledged Protestant ethic at its core, ... Throughout the book I employ a hermeneutical approach attentive to narrative and rhetoric, treating pragmatist texts and ...
This book offers a compelling new interpretation of James’ moral philosophy: an "ethics of responsible self-fashioning.
McNeilly, D. P. (2000), The Old South Frontier: Cotton Plantations and the Formation of Arkansas Society, 1819–61, Fayetteville: University of ... Ratner, C. (2013), Cooperation, Community and Co-ops in a Global Era, New York: Springer.
Building a Social Democracy examines the various types of communication practices that are necessary to build a social democracy.
(2019) Pragmatist Kant, Nordic Studies in Pragmatism, vol. 4, Helsinki: Nordic Pragmatism Network, online, www.nordprag.org Vanden Auweele, D. (2019) Pessimism in Kant's Ethics and Rational Religion, Lanham, MD: Lexington Books.
Chapter 3, entitled “Sight,” includes a long footnote recommending that students supplement a good textbook on the anatomy of the eye with their own, hands- on dissection of “a bullock's eye, which any butcher will furnish” (35).
A well-wisher from Baltimore sent both the Lyceum Observer and a letter to Sergeant Major Fleetwood just after he left home.73 ... and one of Fleetwood's letters home was read before the Galbreath Lyceum, he felt “somewhat disgruntled.
For a popular period example, see George Herbert Betts, The Mind and Its Education (1906; New York: D. Appleton and ... Paul Stob, William James and the Art of Popular Statement (East Lansing: Michigan State University Press, 2013), 75.