THE
POPULAR SCIENCE
MONTHLY
MARCH, 1907
A DEFENCE OF PRAGMATISM[1] |
I. Its Mediating Office
By Professor WILLIAM JAMES
Harvard University
IN the preface to that admirable collection of essays of his called Heretics, Mr. Chesterton writes these words:
I think with Mr. Chesterton in this matter. I know that you, ladies and gentlemen, have a philosophy, each and all of you, and that the most interesting and important thing about you is the way in which it determines the perspective in your several worlds. You know the same of me. And yet I confess to a certain tremor at the audacity of the enterprise which I am about to begin. For the philosophy which is so important in each of us is not a technical matter, it is our more or less dumb sense of what life honestly and deeply means. It is only partly got from books; it is our individual way of just seeing and feeling the total push and pressure of the cosmos.