James's Pragmatism and Plato's Sophistes Abstract: In the first chapter of pragmatism, William James outlined two philosophical temperaments. He believes that human nature alters philosophical ways of people, although its existence is rarely recognized. This sentence from James led me to Plato's boss, in particular the temperament and existence relationship. Plato explains about a particular personality, but I think there is a subject. The ancients restricted everyone to realities like tangible or immovable.
William James is the most famous practical philosopher, a scholar known for his pragmatism. For James, pragmatism is about value and morality. The purpose of philosophy is to understand what values and reasons exist for us. James thinks it is worth to us only when ideas and beliefs work. In what he called instrumentalism, John Dewey tried to combine Pearce and James' pragmatism. Therefore, instrumentism is a logical concept and also an ethical analysis. Instrumentalism explains Dewey 's view of reasoning and the conditions under which the investigation is conducted. On the one hand it should be controlled by logical constraints, on the other hand its purpose is to produce goods and satisfaction.
Perhaps the most influential thinking school in the United States is pragmatism. It began in the late nineteenth century in the United States by Charles Sanders Earrings, William James and John Dewey. Practicalism starts with the belief that you are about to take action. I think that the meaning of a proposition is the result of implicit behavior or practice by accepting a proposition. In the 1870's, the polymer of Charles Sanders Pierce (1839-1914), a logicologist, a mathematician, a philosopher, a scientist, made a coined word. Chauncey Wright, a future dialogue club for intellectuals including Supreme Court Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr., is a member of The Metaphysical Club. And another early practitioner, William James