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While examining the important role of imagination in making moral judgments, John Dewey and Moral Imagination focuses new attention on the relationship between American pragmatism and ethics. Steven Fesmire takes up threads of Dewey's thought that have been largely unexplored and elaborates pragmatism's distinctive contribution to understandings of moral experience, inquiry, and judgment. Building on two Deweyan notions—that moral character, belief, and reasoning are part of a social and historical context and that moral deliberation is an imaginative, dramatic rehearsal of possibilities—Fesmire shows that moral imagination can be conceived as a process of aesthetic perception and artistic creativity. Fesmire's original readings of Dewey shed new light on the imaginative process, human emotional make-up and expression, and the nature of moral judgment. This original book presents a robust and distinctly pragmatic approach to ethics, politics, moral education, and moral conduct.
Contents
Preliminary Table of Contents:
Acknowledgments
List of Abbreviations
Introduction: Revitalizing Ethics
Part 1. Character, Belief, and Intelligence in Classical Pragmatism
1. Habit and Character
2. The Pragmatic Turn
3. Pragmatism's Reconstruction of Reason
Part 2. Moral Imagination
4. Imagination in Pragmatist Ethics
5. Dramatic Rehearsal
6. The Deweyan Ideal
7. The Moral Artist
Notes
Bibliography
Index