Intelligence and Radicalism in John Dewey's Philosophy

Telos: Critical Theory of the Contemporary 1969 (3):72-81 (1969)
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Abstract

Dewey's development, on the socio-political plane, is analyzed in terms of his pre-roosevelt quasi-socialism to his post-roosevelt, 1930's mild liberalism and anti-communism. the complicated relations of dewey's with the emerging "third world" revolutions and with the new soviet revolutionary government and with the trotskyist (sidney hook) movement in the u. s. during that time, made a break between dewey's new brand of gradualist, piecemealist, plague-on-both-your-houses liberalism and the real left, and dewey's outlook maintained its continuity as a dominant mode of liberal thought to this day, with all the dire consequences of that

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