Eidos. A Journal for Philosophy of Culture (Nov 2020)

John Dewey’s Theory of Emergence: Culture, Mind, Consciousness, and Cognition

  • Paul Benjamin Cherlin

DOI
https://doi.org/10.14394/eidos.jpc.2020.0033
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 4, no. 3
pp. 86 – 98

Abstract

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Emergentism is an important and yet underexplored component of John Dewey’s metaphysical program, and concerns the ways in which existences relate, operate, and grow in coordination with a more inclusive environment. Through an emergent account, Dewey addresses continuities among the generic traits of nature, inanimate substance, biological life, and experiential “fields” such as mind and consciousness. The notion of a field is especially important for depicting the ways in which existences serially interact in accordance with some particular purpose or set of functions. Apart from an emergent scheme that contextualizes the interactive contexts of experience, phenomena such as “mind” and “consciousness” remain enigmatic occurrences. Moreover, cognition, and with it instances of “knowing,” remain susceptible to merely “subjective” characterizations that reinforce a misleading dualism between mind and nature. In addition to its role in addressing naturalistic continuities, Dewey’s emergentism suggests a non-reductive philosophical methodology that directly challenges contemporary varieties of realism and materialism.

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