FOOTNOTE:

[1] "The Pragmatic Method," Journal of Philosophy, Psychology, and Scientific Methods, 1918, Vol. XV, pp. 149-156.


CONTENTS

ChapterPage
I. "Psychology as Philosophic Method"[1]
II. The Development of the Psychological Standpoint[15]
III. "Moral Theory and Practice"[33]
IV. Functional Psychology[47]
V. The Evolutionary Standpoint[59]
VI. "Studies in Logical Theory"[72]
VII. The Polemical Period[88]
VIII. Later Developments[105]
IX. Conclusions[119]

CHAPTER I "PSYCHOLOGY AS PHILOSOPHIC METHOD"

Dewey's earliest standpoint in philosophy is presented in two articles published in Mind in 1886: "The Psychological Standpoint," and "Psychology as Philosophic Method."[2] These articles appear to have been written in connection with his Psychology, which was published in the same year, and which represents the same general point of view as applied to the study of mental phenomena. For the purposes of the present study attention may be confined to the two articles in Mind.