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(2017) European Journal of Pragmatism and American Philosophy 9 (2).
Throughout his intellectual career, John Dewey was asking the question of relationships between knowledge of common sense and scientific knowledge. We propose to examine these relations in the light of a comparison with Thomas Reid, one of the founding authors of the modern philosophy of common sense. This comparison tries to set up what should be considered as a closer formulation of what knowledge consists in: a matter of attitudes, a set of dispositions. Such a convergent formulation equally means not to bring into conflict or contradiction – in the style of a “dualism” – what are common sense and scientific knowledge. In so doing, it is thus necessary to reshape an operative distinction between those two kinds of “attitudes”; and this distinction is not ontological but decisively methodological, epistemological and, on a practical level, political.
Publication details
DOI: 10.4000/ejpap.1040
Full citation:
Gautier, C. (2017). Attitudes of knowledge and common sense: remarks on Reid and Dewey. European Journal of Pragmatism and American Philosophy 9 (2), pp. n/a.