stanford plato
Pragmatism is a philosophical tradition that – very broadly – understands knowing the world as inseparable from agency within it. This general idea has attracted a remarkably rich and at times contrary range of interpretations, including: that all philosophical concepts should be tested via scientific experimentation, that a claim is true if and only if it is useful (relatedly: if a philosophical theory does not contribute directly to social progress then it is not worth much), that experience consists in transacting with rather than representing nature, that articulate language rests on a deep bed of shared human practices that can never be fully ‘made explicit’.
Facets
agency
Lenses
epistemologies
Knowing as agency
ontologies
truth as that which is useful
ecologies
scientific testability
transactional, representational, relational
uses
practice
language
that articulate language rests on a deep bed of shared human practices that can never be fully ‘made explicit’
Viewpoints
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Lenses
Facets
Viewpoints