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John Dewey and the ethics of historical belief : religion and the representation of the past / Curtis Hutt.

By: Material type: TextTextPublication details: Albany : State University of New York Press, ©2013.Description: 1 online resource (xiii, 165 pages)Content type:
Media type:
Carrier type:
ISBN:
  • 1438445709
  • 9781438445700
Subject(s): Genre/Form: Additional physical formats: Print version:: No titleDDC classification:
  • 191 23
LOC classification:
  • B945.D44 H88 2013
Other classification:
  • online - EBSCO
Online resources:
Contents:
Historical Introduction: Providing Reliable Witness to the Past: The New Troubled Relationship between Historians and Believers -- Testes Veritatis: An Old Debate -- Testes Veritatis: New Developments -- The Ethics of Historical Belief: Religion and the Representation of the Past -- 1. The Ethics of Finding and Making the Past. Discovering the Past: The Epistemological Ethics of Scientific Historiography ; Creating the Past: The Ethics of the Interpretation of the Past ; Summary: Ranke and H. White -- 2. Dewey and the Ethics of Historical Belief. Dewey on the Justification of Historical Belief ; Dewey's Critique of Finding and Making the Past ; Dewey's Alternative Approach to the Ethics of Historical Belief -- 3. The Two Faces of Deweyan Pragmatism. Pragmatism without Method? ; Richard Rorty on the Ethics of Historical Belief ; Richard Bernstein on the Ethics of Historical Belief ; Dewey on Interpretation and Inquiry -- 4. Justification, Entitlement, and Tradition: Debate After Dewey. From Van Harvey to the New Traditionalism ; The Historian and the Believer: The Morality of Historical Knowledge and Christian Belief ; Justification, Entitlement, and Tradition -- 5. Dewey and the Ethics of Historical Belief. Representing the Past.
Summary: "Uses the thought of John Dewey to address the ethics of historical belief within religious and critical historiographical traditions. John Dewey and the Ethics of Historical Belief addresses the ethics of the representation of the past with a focus on the justification of historical belief within religious and critical historiographical traditions. What makes a belief about the past justified? What makes one historical belief preferable to another? A great deal rides on how these questions are answered. History textbook wars take place across the globe, from California to India. Cultural heritage protection is politicized and historical research is commonly deployed in support of partisan agendas. This book explores not only John Dewey's relatively unknown contribution to this topic, but also the leading alternatives to his approach. Author Curtis Hutt focuses attention on the debate among those most influenced by Dewey's thought, including Richard Rorty, Richard Bernstein, James Kloppenberg, Wayne Proudfoot, and Jeffrey Stout. He also reviews the seminal work of Van Harvey on the relationship between historians and religious believers. Dewey is cast as a vigorous opponent of those who argue that justified historical belief depends upon one's religious tradition. Strongly resisted is the idea that historical belief can be justified simply on account of acculturation. Instead, Dewey's view that beliefs are justified as a result of theorized historical inquiry is emphasized. In order to prevent moral blindness, the responsible historian and theologian alike are advised to attend to witnesses to the past that arise from outside of their own traditions."--Publisher
Holdings
Item type Current library Call number URL Status Notes Barcode
eBook eBook Biblioteca "Angelicum" Pont. Univ. S.Tommaso d'Aquino Nuvola online online - EBSCO (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Online access Not for loan (Accesso limitato) Accesso per gli utenti autorizzati / Access for authorized users (ebsco)520381

Includes bibliographical references and index.

Print version record.

Historical Introduction: Providing Reliable Witness to the Past: The New Troubled Relationship between Historians and Believers -- Testes Veritatis: An Old Debate -- Testes Veritatis: New Developments -- The Ethics of Historical Belief: Religion and the Representation of the Past -- 1. The Ethics of Finding and Making the Past. Discovering the Past: The Epistemological Ethics of Scientific Historiography ; Creating the Past: The Ethics of the Interpretation of the Past ; Summary: Ranke and H. White -- 2. Dewey and the Ethics of Historical Belief. Dewey on the Justification of Historical Belief ; Dewey's Critique of Finding and Making the Past ; Dewey's Alternative Approach to the Ethics of Historical Belief -- 3. The Two Faces of Deweyan Pragmatism. Pragmatism without Method? ; Richard Rorty on the Ethics of Historical Belief ; Richard Bernstein on the Ethics of Historical Belief ; Dewey on Interpretation and Inquiry -- 4. Justification, Entitlement, and Tradition: Debate After Dewey. From Van Harvey to the New Traditionalism ; The Historian and the Believer: The Morality of Historical Knowledge and Christian Belief ; Justification, Entitlement, and Tradition -- 5. Dewey and the Ethics of Historical Belief. Representing the Past.

"Uses the thought of John Dewey to address the ethics of historical belief within religious and critical historiographical traditions. John Dewey and the Ethics of Historical Belief addresses the ethics of the representation of the past with a focus on the justification of historical belief within religious and critical historiographical traditions. What makes a belief about the past justified? What makes one historical belief preferable to another? A great deal rides on how these questions are answered. History textbook wars take place across the globe, from California to India. Cultural heritage protection is politicized and historical research is commonly deployed in support of partisan agendas. This book explores not only John Dewey's relatively unknown contribution to this topic, but also the leading alternatives to his approach. Author Curtis Hutt focuses attention on the debate among those most influenced by Dewey's thought, including Richard Rorty, Richard Bernstein, James Kloppenberg, Wayne Proudfoot, and Jeffrey Stout. He also reviews the seminal work of Van Harvey on the relationship between historians and religious believers. Dewey is cast as a vigorous opponent of those who argue that justified historical belief depends upon one's religious tradition. Strongly resisted is the idea that historical belief can be justified simply on account of acculturation. Instead, Dewey's view that beliefs are justified as a result of theorized historical inquiry is emphasized. In order to prevent moral blindness, the responsible historian and theologian alike are advised to attend to witnesses to the past that arise from outside of their own traditions."--Publisher

English.