Mind in Nature: John Dewey, Cognitive Science, and a Naturalistic Philosophy for Living

Mind in Nature: John Dewey, Cognitive Science, and a Naturalistic Philosophy for Living

by Mark L. Johnson, Jay Schulkin
Mind in Nature: John Dewey, Cognitive Science, and a Naturalistic Philosophy for Living

Mind in Nature: John Dewey, Cognitive Science, and a Naturalistic Philosophy for Living

by Mark L. Johnson, Jay Schulkin

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Overview

A dialogue between contemporary neuroscience and John Dewey’s seminal philosophical work Experience and Nature, exploring how the bodily roots of human meaning, selfhood, and values provide wisdom for living.

The intersection of cognitive science and pragmatist philosophy reveals the bodily basis of human meaning, thought, selfhood, and values. John Dewey's revolutionary account of pragmatist philosophy Experience and Nature (1925) explores humans as complex social animals, developing through ongoing engagement with their physical, interpersonal, and cultural environments. Drawing on recent research in biology and neuroscience that supports, extends, and, on occasion, reformulates some of Dewey's seminal insights, embodied cognition expert Mark L. Johnson and behavioral neuroscientist Jay Schulkin develop the most expansive intertwining of Dewey's philosophy with biology and neuroscience to date.

The result is a positive, life-affirming understanding of how our evolutionary and individual development shapes who we are, what we can know, where our deepest values come from, and how we can cultivate wisdom for a meaningful and intelligent life.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780262373456
Publisher: MIT Press
Publication date: 03/28/2023
Sold by: Penguin Random House Publisher Services
Format: eBook
Pages: 288
File size: 4 MB

About the Author

Mark L. Johnson is Professor Emeritus of Philosophy at the University of Oregon. He is a developer of embodied cognition theory, focusing on the philosophical implications of human embodiment for meaning, conceptualization, reasoning, values, and knowing. He has written multiple books on cognitive science and embodiment, including most recently Out of the Cave: A Natural Philosophy of Mind and Knowing (MIT Press, 2021). Jay Schulkin is Research Professor in the College of Medicine at the University of Washington. Many of his previous books in neuroscience and philosophy integrate a pragmatist and evolutionary perspective with contemporary cognitive and neural science. He has published two previous books with the MIT Press, Roots of Social Sensibility and Neural Function (2000) and Rethinking Homeostasis (2003).

Table of Contents

Preface xi
1 Introduction: Philosophy, Naturally 1
2 It All Starts with Experience 11
3 The Naturalized Metaphysics of Emerging Mind 31
4 Meaning and Thought 49
5 Consciousness Wakes Up in Mind 75
6 Knowing as Transformative Action 99
7 The Making of a Self 121
8 The Aesthetics of Life and Mind 149
9 Philosophy Naturalized 181
10 Living with Naturalism 207
Appendix 235
References 237
Index 263

What People are Saying About This

From the Publisher

“Can naturalism explain the transformative aspect of our lives? Mind in Nature offers a striking answer through a powerful update, in light of cognitive neuroscience, of pragmatist insights into the embodiment of human experience.” 
Italo Testa, Professor of Theoretical Philosophy, University of Parma

“Johnson and Schulkin’s book beautifully fills the gap on the enduring originality of John Dewey’s naturalism, showing us what we can gain from Dewey when inquiring about knowledge, the self, habits, values, meaning or consciousness.”
Pierre Steiner, Professor of Philosophy, Université de Technologie de Compiègne/Sorbonne Université

“Johnson and Schulkin present a nondelusional naturalistic philosophy of animals who may indeed strut and fret their hour upon the stage, as Macbeth despaired, but whose lives are far more meaningful, purposeful, and value-rich than mere tales ‘told by an idiot, full of sound and fury, signifying nothing.’”
Steven Fesmire, author of John Dewey and Moral Imagination; editor of The Oxford Handbook of Dewey

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