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Word: deweyitis (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...Solution. For 65 years after his Hopkins days, Dewey preached his doctrine, making his way from the University of Michigan to the University of Chicago and finally to Columbia's Teachers College. Tugging at his mustache and rumpling his hair, he lectured in a gentle voice, pausing awkwardly now & then to glance at his crumpled fistful of notes, or to gaze distractedly out of the window. But however labored his delivery, his message took hold. Philosophy, he declared, could not lean on eternal verities, nor summon up answers, for there are no ultimate answers to be summoned. "The moment...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Education: Account Rendered | 6/9/1952 | See Source »

Born the year (1859) in which Darwin's Origin of Species came out, Dewey marked the crest of a tide that had begun to swell with the French Revolution. No man so completely summed up the raw, rationalistic credo of his century-belief in the here & now, in the necessity for perpetual adjustment to change, in the idea that man has no provable end, only "ends that are literally endless...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Education: Account Rendered | 6/9/1952 | See Source »

...graduate student from Vermont made a deep impression on President Daniel Coit Gilman of Johns Hopkins University. But President Gilman did think that the young man was off on a wrong track. "Don't be so bookish," Gilman thundered. "Get out and see more people." Student John Dewey listened politely to his president, and then ignored the advice. He had long since made up his mind that he would keep right on studying: his ambition in life was to become a philosopher...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Education: Account Rendered | 6/9/1952 | See Source »

...time, John Dewey more than realized his ambition. A shy, shuffling figure, he probably managed to exert as much influence on U.S. education and thinking as any man of his time. Teachers and judges became Deweyites, and so did millions of ordinary men and women, who did not even know who he was or what his theories were...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Education: Account Rendered | 6/9/1952 | See Source »

...such a world, said Dewey, the philosopher (and, for that matter, the educator) has no alternative but to ignore the universe. Nor should he concern himself with God or the existence of absolutes. His target is man and society, where nothing is either good or bad, but only better or worse. Values are not eternal; they are perpetually born, and "philosophy cannot desire a better work than to engage in the act of midwifery that was assigned to it by Socrates 2,500 years...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Education: Account Rendered | 6/9/1952 | See Source »

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