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James Campbell

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James Campbell

 

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Prof. Dr. James Campbell
Distinguished University Professor
Department of Philosophy
Director of the American Studies Program
The University of Toledo
Mail Stop 510
2801 West Bancroft Avenue
Toledo, Ohio

Email: james.campbell@utoledo.edu
www: http://www.utoledo.edu/as/philosophy/faculty/campbell.html


Videointerview

James Campbell #5

Experience and Language
»If existence in its immediacies could speak it would proclaim: ‘I may have relatives but I am not related.' In aesthetic objects, that is in all immediately enjoyed and suffered things, in things directly possessed, they thus speak for themselves.« (LW 1: 75f)

James Campbell #1

Universalism/Contextualism
»Habits of speech, including syntax and vocabulary, and modes of interpretation have been formed in the face of inclusive and defining situations of context ... We are not explicitly aware of the role of context just because our every utterance is so saturated with it that it forms the significance of what we say and hear ... Now thought lives, moves, and has its being in and through symbols, and, therefore, depends for meaning upon context as do the symbols ... I should venture to assert that the most pervasive fallacy of philosophic thinking goes back to neglect of context.« (LW 6: 4-5)
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James Campbell #2

Re/de/constructions:
Construction (experience)
»I have used the word construction" to denote "the creative mind, the mind that is genuinely productive in its operations. We are given to associating creative mind with persons regarded as rare and unique, like geniuses. But every individual is in his own way unique. Each one experiences life from a different angle than anybody else, and consequently has something distinctive to give others if he can turn his experiences into ideas and pass them on to others.« (LW 5: 127)
Reconstruction (habit)

»There is no one among us who is not called upon to face honestly and courageously the equipment of beliefs, religious, political, artistic, economic, that has come to him in all sorts of indirect and uncriticized ways, and to inquire how much of it is validated and verified in present need, opportunity, and application.« (LW 5: 142)
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James Campbell #2c

Re/de/constructions:
Deconstruction (criticism)
»Creative activity is our great need; but criticism, self-criticism, is the road to its release.« (LW 5: 143) »We cannot permanently divest ourselves of the intellectual habits we take on and wear when we assimilate the culture of our own time and place. But intelligent furthering of culture demands that we take some of them off, that we inspect them critically to see what they are made of and what wearing them does to us« (LW 1: 40)
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James Campbell #3

Truth and Warranted Assertions (Experimentalism)
»... the term ‘warranted assertion' s preferred to the terms belief and knowledge. It is free from the ambiguity of these latter terms, and it involves reference to inquiry as that which warrants assertion« (LW 12: 17)
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James Campbell #4

Experience and the Real
»... the question ... is what the real is. If natural existence is qualitatively individualized or genuinely plural, as well as repetitious, and if things have both temporal quality and recurrence or uniformity, then the more realistic knowledge is, the more fully it will reflect and exemplify these traits« (LW 1: 127)
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James Campbell #5

Experience and Language
»If existence in its immediacies could speak it would proclaim: ‘I may have relatives but I am not related.' In aesthetic objects, that is in all immediately enjoyed and suffered things, in things directly possessed, they thus speak for themselves.« (LW 1: 75f)
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James Campbell #6

Communication and Participation
»Of all affairs, communication is the most wonderful. That things should be able to pass from the plane of external pushing and pulling to that of revealing themselves to man, and thereby to themselves; and that the fruit of communication should be participation, sharing, is a wonder by the side of which transubstantiation pales.« (LW 1: 132)
»Communication is the process of creating participation, of making common what had been isolated and singular; and part of the miracle it achieves is that, in being communicated, the conveyance of meaning gives body and definiteness to the experience of the one who utters as well as to that of those who listen« (LW 10: 248f).
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James Campbell #7

Democracy (Liberalism and Socialism)
»The end of democracy is a radical end. For it is an end that has not been adequately realized in any country at any time. It is radical because it requires great change in existing social institutions, economic, legal and cultural.« (LW 11: 298f)
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James Campbell #8

Democracy (Experience and Education)
»Democracy is the faith that the process of experience is more important than any special result attained, so that special results achieved are of ultimate value only as they are used to enrich and order the ongoing process. Since the process of experience is capable of being educative, faith in democracy is all one with faith in experience and education.« (LW 14: 229)
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James Campbell #9

Democracy (Culture and the Power of Imagination)
»Imagination is the chief instrument of the good" (LW 10: 350), because only "imaginative vision elicits the possibilities that are interwoven within the texture of the actual.« (LW 10: 348)
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James Campbell #10

Democracy (Intelligence and Local Communities)
»In a word, that expansion and reinforcement of personal understanding and judgment by the cumulative and transmitted intellectual wealth of the community which may render nugatory the indictment of democracy drawn on the basis of the ignorance, bias and levity of the masses, can be fulfilled only in the relations of personal intercourse in the local community ... Vision is a spectator; hearing is a participator ... We lie, as Emerson said, in the lap of an immense intelligence. But that intelligence is dormant and its communications are broken, inarticulate and faint until it possesses the local community as its medium.« (LW 2: 371f)
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James Campbell #11

Democracy (Intelligence and Local Communities)
»In a word, that expansion and reinforcement of personal understanding and judgment by the cumulative and transmitted intellectual wealth of the community which may render nugatory the indictment of democracy drawn on the basis of the ignorance, bias and levity of the masses, can be fulfilled only in the relations of personal intercourse in the local community ... Vision is a spectator; hearing is a participator ... We lie, as Emerson said, in the lap of an immense intelligence. But that intelligence is dormant and its communications are broken, inarticulate and faint until it possesses the local community as its medium.« (LW 2: 371f)
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EDUCATION:
 B.A. in Philosophy, Temple University, 1973M.A. in Philosophy, SUNY at Stony Brook, 1978Ph.D. in Philosophy, SUNY at Stony Brook, 1979Social Reconstruction in the Thought of John Dewey and George Herbert Mead HONORS: Fulbright Lecturer, University of Innsbruck, Austria, 1990-91University of Toledo, Researcher of the Year, 1994American Philosophical Society, Mellon Resident Research Fellow, 1995-1996American Association of Philosophy Teachers, President, 1996-1998University of Toledo, Master Teacher, 1997-2001University of Toledo, Doermann Lecturer, 1999University of Toledo, Senior Humanities Fellow, 2001-2004Fulbright Senior Scholar, University of Munich, 2003-2004Society for the Advancement of American Philosophy, President, 2008-2010 BOOKS: The Community Reconstructs: The Meaning of Pragmatic Social Thought (Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 1992. ix + 147 pp.) Selected Writings of James Hayden Tufts, edited with Introduction and Annotated Bibliography (Carbondale: Southern Illinois University Press, 1992, lvi + 433 pp.) Understanding John Dewey: Nature and Cooperative Intelligence (Chicago: Open Court, 1995, xii + 310 pp.) Recovering Benjamin Franklin: An Exploration of a Life of Science and Service (Chicago: Open Court, 1999, x + 302 pp.) A Thoughtful Profession: The Early Years of the American Philosophical Association (Chicago: Open Court, 2006, xi + 339 pp.) Experience as Philosophy: On the Work of John J. McDermott, co-edited with R. E. Hart (New York: Fordham University Press, 2006, ix + 322 pp.)

 Link to his publications: http://www.utoledo.edu/as/philosophy/pdfs/campbell_publications.pdf