Delight Springs

Thursday, March 30, 2023

A pluralistic direction

Tomorrow afternoon's Lyceum speaker John Stuhr:

"Near the very end of “The Moral Philosopher and the Moral Life,” James wrote that every day we each face choices between good and evil, between life and death. In a tone I take to be both egalitarian and humble, he added: “From this unsparing practical ordeal no professor’s lectures and no array of books can save us” (WB, 162).

James was right: By themselves, lectures and books and their authors will not save your life. They won’t win you friends. Reading a book—even this one!—will not get you a promotion or make you wealthy. They won’t make someone else love you, understand you, or even treat you kindly—or ensure that you treat others with love, understanding, and kindness. They will not take away all your fears or longings. They won’t bring you recognition, physical health, or personal well-being. No one has flourished merely by reading a book or simply by taking in a lecture.

Realization of purposes requires living, not just a theory of life. It requires living reflectively and not just a life of reflection. Above all, it requires action—and the hope, faith, or melioristic temperament to take up action in the face of possibilities without guarantees. And this requires the attention and hard work of staying at it, keeping up the action. I hope that this book on, across, with, and through James, at times without (and even against) James, and always from my own fallible angle of vision and selective purposes, can contribute for its readers—for you—to this larger pragmatic, radically empirical, and pluralistic endeavor.

James’s writings, when taken both in full and critically, constitute an invaluable resource for the future and its new problems, new possibilities, and new forms of personal and social life. In this sense, all persons who enter into and take up James’s vision and worldview share a journey with no end other than itself, a pluralistic admission—ever not quite!—and a pluralistic direction: TOWARD."

"No Professor's Lectures Can Save Us: William James's Pragmatism, Radical Empiricism, and Pluralism" by John J. Stuhr: https://a.co/1kQOPFk

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