John Dewey and democracy as regulative ideal

Autores/as

  • Rosa M. Calcaterra Università degli Studi Roma Tre

Palabras clave:

Anti-dogmatism. Continuism. Faith. Humanistic naturalism. Radical democracy. Individualism.

Resumen

The religious background of John Dewey’s thought strongly affects his conception of democracy, which nevertheless explicitly claims the independence from supernatural beliefs. The ‘quasi-religious’ feature that he assigns to democratic ideals is a peculiar expression of his ‘naturalistic humanism’, which enhances imaginative capacity and scientific knowledge as basic instruments for better developing human possibilities, aside from individualism and from any form of dogmatism. The complexity of Dewey’s thought, of its sources of inspiration as well as of its most original issues, offers solid reasons for contrasting the risk of an incautious scientism and at the same time leaves room for further reflections about currents problems of democratic societies.

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Publicado

2015-04-30

Cómo citar

Calcaterra, R. M. (2015). John Dewey and democracy as regulative ideal. Cognitio: Revista De Filosofia, 15(2), 275–288. Recuperado a partir de https://revistas.pucsp.br/index.php/cognitiofilosofia/article/view/23074

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Artigos Cognitio