Classical American Pragmatism as Anti-Scientism

Philosophy of Science 90 (5) (forthcoming)
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Abstract

Scientism has recently experienced a resurgence of interest in philosophy. One version of scientism often defended is ontological scientism—the view that any kind or property not mentioned in the theories of science has only a subordinate, secondary kind of reality. It is worth noting that a dominant tradition in the history of philosophy of science—classical American pragmatism—undertook decades of critical engagement with contemporaneous scientistic beliefs, many of which resemble those being debated at the present time. This anti-scientistic philosophy has multiple points of relevance for contemporary debates and defenses of ontological scientism.

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