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William James

William James (January 11, 1842 – August 26, 1910) was an American philosopher, historian, and psychologist, and the first educator to offer a psychology course in the United States.[4] James is considered to be a leading thinker of the late 19th century, one of the most influential philosophers of the United States, and the "Father of American psychology".[5][6][7]

William James
James in 1903
Born(1842-01-11)January 11, 1842
New York City, US
DiedAugust 26, 1910(1910-08-26) (aged 68)
Alma materHarvard University (MD)
Era19th-/20th-century philosophy
RegionWestern philosophy
School
InstitutionsHarvard University
Notable students
Main interests
Notable ideas

Along with Charles Sanders Peirce, James established the philosophical school known as pragmatism, and is also cited as one of the founders of functional psychology. A Review of General Psychology analysis, published in 2002, ranked James as the 14th most eminent psychologist of the 20th century.[8] A survey published in American Psychologist in 1991 ranked James's reputation in second place,[9] after Wilhelm Wundt, who is widely regarded as the founder of experimental psychology.[10][11] James also developed the philosophical perspective known as radical empiricism. James's work has influenced philosophers and academics such as Émile Durkheim, W. E. B. Du Bois, Edmund Husserl, Bertrand Russell, Ludwig Wittgenstein, Hilary Putnam, Richard Rorty, and Marilynne Robinson.[12]

Born into a wealthy family, James was the son of the Swedenborgian theologian Henry James Sr. and the brother of both the prominent novelist Henry James and the diarist Alice James. James trained as a physician and taught anatomy at Harvard, but never practiced medicine. Instead he pursued his interests in psychology and then philosophy. He wrote widely on many topics, including epistemology, education, metaphysics, psychology, religion, and mysticism. Among his most influential books are The Principles of Psychology, a groundbreaking text in the field of psychology; Essays in Radical Empiricism, an important text in philosophy; and The Varieties of Religious Experience, an investigation of different forms of religious experience, including theories on mind-cure.[13]

Early life

 
William James in Brazil, 1865

William James was born at the Astor House in New York City on January 11, 1842. He was the son of Henry James Sr., a noted and independently wealthy Swedenborgian theologian well acquainted with the literary and intellectual elites of his day. The intellectual brilliance of the James family milieu and the remarkable epistolary talents of several of its members have made them a subject of continuing interest to historians, biographers, and critics.

William James received an eclectic trans-Atlantic education, developing fluency in both German and French. Education in the James household encouraged cosmopolitanism. The family made two trips to Europe while William James was still a child, setting a pattern that resulted in thirteen more European journeys during his life. James wished to pursue painting, his early artistic bent led to an apprenticeship in the studio of William Morris Hunt in Newport, Rhode Island, but his father urged him to become a physician instead. Since this did not align with James's interests, he stated that he wanted to specialize in physiology. Once he figured this was also not what he wanted to do, he then announced he was going to specialize in the nervous system and psychology. James then switched in 1861 to scientific studies at the Lawrence Scientific School of Harvard College.

In his early adulthood, James suffered from a variety of physical ailments, including those of the eyes, back, stomach, and skin. He was also tone deaf.[14] He was subject to a variety of psychological symptoms which were diagnosed at the time as neurasthenia, and which included periods of depression during which he contemplated suicide for months on end. Two younger brothers, Garth Wilkinson (Wilky) and Robertson (Bob), fought in the Civil War. James himself was an advocate of peace. He suggested that instead of youth serving in the military that they serve the public in a term of service, "to get the childishness knocked out of them." The other three siblings (William, Henry, and Alice James) all suffered from periods of invalidism.[citation needed]

He took up medical studies at Harvard Medical School in 1864 (according to his brother Henry James, the author). He took a break in the spring of 1865 to join naturalist Louis Agassiz on a scientific expedition up the Amazon River, but aborted his trip after eight months, as he suffered bouts of severe seasickness and mild smallpox. His studies were interrupted once again due to illness in April 1867. He traveled to Germany in search of a cure and remained there until November 1868; at that time he was 26 years old. During this period, he began to publish; reviews of his works appeared in literary periodicals such as the North American Review.[citation needed]

James finally earned his MD degree in June 1869 but he never practiced medicine. What he called his "soul-sickness" would only be resolved in 1872, after an extended period of philosophical searching. He married Alice Gibbens in 1878. In 1882 he joined the Theosophical Society.[15]

James's time in Germany proved intellectually fertile, helping him find that his true interests lay not in medicine but in philosophy and psychology. Later, in 1902 he would write: "I originally studied medicine in order to be a physiologist, but I drifted into psychology and philosophy from a sort of fatality. I never had any philosophic instruction, the first lecture on psychology I ever heard being the first I ever gave".[16]

In 1875–1876, James, Henry Pickering Bowditch (1840–1911), Charles Pickering Putnam (1844–1914), and James Jackson Putnam (1846–1918) founded the Putnam Camp at St. Huberts, Essex County, New York.[17]

Career

James interacted with a wide array of writers and scholars throughout his life, including his godfather Ralph Waldo Emerson, his godson William James Sidis, as well as Charles Sanders Peirce, Bertrand Russell, Josiah Royce, Ernst Mach, John Dewey, Macedonio Fernández, Walter Lippmann, Mark Twain, Horatio Alger, G. Stanley Hall, Henri Bergson, Carl Jung, Jane Addams and Sigmund Freud.

James spent almost all of his academic career at Harvard. He was appointed instructor in physiology for the spring 1873 term, instructor in anatomy and physiology in 1873, assistant professor of psychology in 1876, assistant professor of philosophy in 1881, full professor in 1885, endowed chair in psychology in 1889, return to philosophy in 1897, and emeritus professor of philosophy in 1907.

James studied medicine, physiology, and biology, and began to teach in those subjects, but was drawn to the scientific study of the human mind at a time when psychology was constituting itself as a science. James's acquaintance with the work of figures like Hermann Helmholtz in Germany and Pierre Janet in France facilitated his introduction of courses in scientific psychology at Harvard University. He taught his first experimental psychology course at Harvard in the 1875–1876 academic year.[18]

During his Harvard years, James joined in philosophical discussions and debates with Charles Peirce, Oliver Wendell Holmes, and Chauncey Wright that evolved into a lively group informally known as The Metaphysical Club in 1872. Louis Menand (2001) suggested that this Club provided a foundation for American intellectual thought for decades to come. James joined the Anti-Imperialist League in 1898, in opposition to the United States annexation of the Philippines.

 
William James and Josiah Royce, near James's country home in Chocorua, New Hampshire in September 1903. James's daughter Peggy took the picture. On hearing the camera click, James cried out: "Royce, you're being photographed! Look out! I say Damn the Absolute!"

Among James's students at Harvard University were Boris Sidis, Theodore Roosevelt, George Santayana, W. E. B. Du Bois, G. Stanley Hall, Ralph Barton Perry, Gertrude Stein, Horace Kallen, Morris Raphael Cohen, Walter Lippmann, Alain Locke, C. I. Lewis, and Mary Whiton Calkins. Antiquarian bookseller Gabriel Wells tutored under him at Harvard in the late 1890s.[19]

His students enjoyed his brilliance and his manner of teaching was free of personal arrogance. They remember him for his kindness and humble attitude. His respectful attitude towards them speaks well of his character.[20]

Following his January 1907 retirement from Harvard, James continued to write and lecture, publishing Pragmatism, A Pluralistic Universe, and The Meaning of Truth. James was increasingly afflicted with cardiac pain during his last years. It worsened in 1909 while he worked on a philosophy text (unfinished but posthumously published as Some Problems in Philosophy). He sailed to Europe in the spring of 1910 to take experimental treatments which proved unsuccessful, and returned home on August 18. His heart failed on August 26, 1910, at his home in Chocorua, New Hampshire.[21] He was buried in the family plot in Cambridge Cemetery, Cambridge, Massachusetts.

He was one of the strongest proponents of the school of functionalism in psychology and of pragmatism in philosophy. He was a founder of the American Society for Psychical Research, as well as a champion of alternative approaches to healing. In 1884 and 1885 he became president of the British Society for Psychical Research for which he wrote in Mind and in the Psychological Review.[22] He challenged his professional colleagues not to let a narrow mindset prevent an honest appraisal of those beliefs.

In an empirical study by Haggbloom et al. using six criteria such as citations and recognition, James was found to be the 14th most eminent psychologist of the 20th century.[23]

Family

William James was the son of Henry James (Senior) of Albany, and Mary Robertson Walsh. He had four siblings: Henry (the novelist), Garth Wilkinson, Robertson, and Alice.[24] William became engaged to Alice Howe Gibbens on May 10, 1878; they were married on July 10. They had 5 children: Henry (born May 18, 1879), William (June 17, 1882 – 1961), Herman (born 1884, died in infancy), Margaret (born March 1887) and Alexander (the artist) (born December 22, 1890). Most of William James's ancestors arrived in America from Scotland or Ireland in the 18th century. Many of them settled in eastern New York or New Jersey. All of James's ancestors were Protestant, well educated, and of character. Within their communities, they worked as farmers, merchants, and traders who were all heavily involved with their church. The last ancestor to arrive in America was William James's paternal grandfather also named William James. He came to America from Ballyjamesduff, County Cavan, Ireland in 1789 when he was 18 years old. There is suspicion that he fled to America because his family tried to force him into the ministry. After traveling to America with no money left, he found a job at a store as a clerk. After continuously working, he was able to own the store himself. As he traveled west to find more job opportunities, he was involved in various jobs such as the salt industry and the Erie Canal project. After being a significant worker in the Erie Canal project and helping Albany become a major center of trade, he then became the first Vice-President of the Albany Savings Bank. William James (grandfather) went from being a poor Irish immigrant to one of the richest men in New York. After his death, his son Henry James inherited his fortune and lived in Europe and the United States searching for the meaning of life.[citation needed]

Writings

William James wrote voluminously throughout his life. A non-exhaustive bibliography of his writings, compiled by John McDermott, is 47 pages long.[25]

He gained widespread recognition with his monumental The Principles of Psychology (1890), totaling twelve hundred pages in two volumes, which took twelve years to complete. Psychology: The Briefer Course, was an 1892 abridgement designed as a less rigorous introduction to the field. These works criticized both the English associationist school and the Hegelianism of his day as competing dogmatisms of little explanatory value, and sought to re-conceive the human mind as inherently purposive and selective.

President Jimmy Carter's Moral Equivalent of War Speech, on April 17, 1977, equating the United States' 1970s energy crisis, oil crisis and the changes and sacrifices Carter's proposed plans would require with the "moral equivalent of war," may have borrowed its title, much of its theme and the memorable phrase from James's classic essay "The Moral Equivalent of War" derived from his last speech, delivered at Stanford University in 1906, and published in 1910, in which "James considered one of the classic problems of politics: how to sustain political unity and civic virtue in the absence of war or a credible threat ..." and which "... sounds a rallying cry for service in the interests of the individual and the nation."[26][27][28][29]

James was remembered as one of America's representative thinkers, psychologist, and philosopher. William James was also one of the most influential writers on religion, psychical research, and self-help. He was told to have a few disciples that followed his writing since they were inspired and enriched by his research.

Epistemology

 
Portrait of William James by John La Farge, circa 1859

James defined true beliefs as those that prove useful to the believer. His pragmatic theory of truth was a synthesis of correspondence theory of truth and coherence theory of truth, with an added dimension. Truth is verifiable to the extent that thoughts and statements correspond with actual things, as well as the extent to which they "hang together," or cohere, as pieces of a puzzle might fit together; these are in turn verified by the observed results of the application of an idea to actual practice.[30][31]

The most ancient parts of truth … also once were plastic. They also were called true for human reasons. They also mediated between still earlier truths and what in those days were novel observations. Purely objective truth, truth in whose establishment the function of giving human satisfaction in marrying previous parts of experience with newer parts played no role whatsoever, is nowhere to be found. The reasons why we call things true is the reason why they are true, for 'to be true' means only to perform this marriage-function.

— "Pragmatism's Conception of Truth," Pragmatism (1907), p. 83.

James held a world view in line with pragmatism, declaring that the value of any truth was utterly dependent upon its use to the person who held it. Additional tenets of James's pragmatism include the view that the world is a mosaic of diverse experiences that can only be properly interpreted and understood through an application of 'radical empiricism.' Radical empiricism, not related to the everyday scientific empiricism, asserts that the world and experience can never be halted for an entirely objective analysis; the mind of the observer and the act of observation affect any empirical approach to truth. The mind, its experiences, and nature are inseparable. James's emphasis on diversity as the default human condition—over and against duality, especially Hegelian dialectical duality—has maintained a strong influence in American culture. James's description of the mind-world connection, which he described in terms of a 'stream of consciousness,' had a direct and significant impact on avant-garde and modernist literature and art, notably in the case of James Joyce.

In "What Pragmatism Means" (1906), James writes that the central point of his own doctrine of truth is, in brief:[32]

Truths emerge from facts, but they dip forward into facts again and add to them; which facts again create or reveal new truth (the word is indifferent) and so on indefinitely. The 'facts' themselves meanwhile are not true. They simply are. Truth is the function of the beliefs that start and terminate among them.

Richard Rorty made the contested claim that James did not mean to give a theory of truth with this statement and that we should not regard it as such. However, other pragmatism scholars such as Susan Haack and Howard Mounce do not share Rorty's instrumentalist interpretation of James.[33]

In The Meaning of Truth (1909), James seems to speak of truth in relativistic terms, in reference to critics of pragmatism: "The critic's trouble … seems to come from his taking the word 'true' irrelatively, whereas the pragmatist always means 'true for him who experiences the workings.'"[34] However, James responded to critics accusing him of relativism, scepticism, or agnosticism, and of believing only in relative truths. To the contrary, he supported an epistemological realism position.[i]

Pragmatism and "cash value"

Pragmatism is a philosophical approach that seeks to both define truth and resolve metaphysical issues. William James demonstrates an application of his method in the form of a simple story:[35][32]

A live squirrel supposed to be clinging on one side of a tree-trunk; while over against the tree's opposite side a human being was imagined to stand. This human witness tries to get sight of the squirrel by moving rapidly round the tree, but no matter how fast he goes, the squirrel moves as fast in the opposite direction, and always keeps the tree between himself and the man, so that never a glimpse of him is caught. The resultant metaphysical problem now is this: Does the man go round the squirrel or not?

James solves the issue by making a distinction between practical meaning. That is, the distinction between meanings of "round." Round in the sense that the man occupies the space north, east, south, and west of the squirrel; and round in the sense that the man occupies the space facing the squirrel's belly, back and sides. Depending on what the debaters meant by "going round," the answer would be clear. From this example James derives the definition of the pragmatic method: to settle metaphysical disputes, one must simply make a distinction of practical consequences between notions, then, the answer is either clear, or the "dispute is idle."[35]

Both James and his colleague, Charles Sanders Peirce, coined the term "cash value":[36]

When he said that the whole meaning of a (clear) conception consists in the entire set of its practical consequences, he had in mind that a meaningful conception must have some sort of experiential "cash value," must somehow be capable of being related to some sort of collection of possible empirical observations under specifiable conditions.

A statement's truthfulness is verifiable through its correspondence to reality, and its observable effects of putting the idea to practice. For example, James extends his Pragmatism to the hypothesis of God: "On pragmatic principles, if the hypothesis of God works satisfactorily in the widest sense of the word, it is true. … The problem is to build it out and determine it so that it will combine satisfactorily with all the other working truths."[37]

From this, we also know that "new" truths must also correspond to already existent truths as well.

From the introduction by Bruce Kuklick (1981, p. xiv) to James's Pragmatism:

James went on to apply the pragmatic method to the epistemological problem of truth. He would seek the meaning of "true" by examining how the idea functioned in our lives. A belief was true, he said, if it worked for all of us, and guided us expeditiously through our semihospitable world. James was anxious to uncover what true beliefs amounted to in human life, what their "cash value" was, and what consequences they led to. A belief was not a mental entity which somehow mysteriously corresponded to an external reality if the belief were true. Beliefs were ways of acting with reference to a precarious environment, and to say they were true was to say they were efficacious in this environment. In this sense the pragmatic theory of truth applied Darwinian ideas in philosophy; it made survival the test of intellectual as well as biological fitness.

James's book of lectures on pragmatism is arguably the most influential book of American philosophy. The lectures inside depict his position on the subject. In his sixth lecture, he begins by defining truth as "agreement with reality."[30] With this, James warns that there will be disagreements between pragmatics and intellectualists over the concepts of "agreement" and "reality", the last reasoning before thoughts settle and become autonomous for us. However, he contrasts this by supporting a more practical interpretation that: a true idea or belief is one that we can blend with our thinking so that it can be justified through experiences.[38]

If theological ideas prove to have a value for concrete life, they will be true, for pragmatism, in the sense of being good for so much. For how much more they are true, will depend entirely on their relations to the other truths that also have to be Acknowledged.

— Pragmatism (1907), p. 29

Whereby the agreement of truths with "reality" results in useful outcomes, "the 'reality' with which truths must agree has three dimensions:"[38][12]

  1. "matters of fact;"
  2. "relations of ideas;" and
  3. "the entire set of other truths to which we are committed."

According to James's pragmatic approach to belief, knowledge is commonly viewed as a justified and true belief. James will accept a view if its conception of truth is analyzed and justified through interpretation, pragmatically. As a matter of fact, James's whole philosophy is of productive beliefs.

Belief in anything involves conceiving of how it is real, but disbelief is the result when we dismiss something because it contradicts another thing we think of as real. In his "Sentiment of Rationality", saying that crucial beliefs are not known is to doubt their truth, even if it seems possible. James names four "postulates of rationality" as valuable but unknowable: God, immorality, freedom, and moral duty.[38][39]

In contrast, the weak side to pragmatism is that the best justification for a claim is whether it works. However, a claim that does not have outcomes cannot be justified, or unjustified, because it will not make a difference.

"There can be no difference that doesn't make a difference."

— Pragmatism (1907), p. 45

When James moves on to then state that pragmatism's goal is ultimately "to try to interpret each notion by tracing its respective practical consequences," he does not clarify what he means by "practical consequences."[40] On the other hand, his friend, colleague, and another key founder in establishing pragmatist beliefs, Charles S. Peirce, dives deeper in defining these consequences. For Peirce, "the consequences we are concerned with are general and intelligible."[41] He further explains this in his 1878 paper "How to Make Ideas Clear," when he introduces a maxim that allows one to interpret consequences as grades of clarity and conception.[42] Describing how everything is derived from perception, Peirce uses the example of the doctrine of transubstantiation to show exactly how he defines practical consequences. Protestants interpret the bread and wine of the Eucharist is flesh and blood in only a subjective sense, while Catholics would label them as actual, and divinely mystical properties of flesh via the "body, blood, soul, and divinity", even with the physical properties remaining as bread and wine in appearance. But to everyone, there can be no knowledge of the wine and bread of the Eucharist unless it is established that either wine and bread possesses certain properties or that anything that is interpreted as the blood and body of Christ is the blood and body of Christ. With this Peirce declares that "our action has exclusive reference to what affects the senses," and that we can mean nothing by transubstantiation than "what has certain effects, direct or indirect, upon our senses."[43] In this sense, James's pragmatic influencer Peirce establishes that what counts as a practical consequence or effect is what can affect one's senses and what is comprehendible and fathomable in the natural world.

Yet James never "[works] out his understanding of 'practical consequences' as fully as Peirce did," nor does he limit these consequences to the senses like Peirce.[41] It then raises the question: what does it mean to be practical? Whether James means the greatest number of positive consequences (in light of utilitarianism), a consequence that considers other perspectives (like his compromise of the tender and tough ways of thinking),[44] or a completely different take altogether, it is unclear to truly tell what consequence truly fits the pragmatic standard, and what doesn't. The closest James is able to get in explaining this idea is by telling his audience to weigh the difference it would "practically make to anyone" if one opinion over the other were true, and although he attempts to clarify it, he never specifies nor establishes the method in which one would weigh the difference between one opinion over the other.[40] Thus, the flaw in his argument appears in that it is difficult to fathom how he would determine these practical consequences, which he continually refers to throughout his work, to be measured or interpreted.

Will to believe doctrine

In William James's 1896 lecture titled "The Will to Believe", James defends the right to violate the principle of evidentialism in order to justify hypothesis venturing. This idea foresaw 20th century objections to evidentialism and sought to ground justified belief in an unwavering principle that would prove more beneficial. Through his philosophy of pragmatism William James justifies religious beliefs by using the results of his hypothetical venturing as evidence to support the hypothesis's truth. Therefore, this doctrine allows one to assume belief in a god and prove its existence by what the belief brings to one's life.

This was criticized by advocates of skepticism rationality, like Bertrand Russell in Free Thought and Official Propaganda and Alfred Henry Lloyd with The Will to Doubt. Both argued that one must always adhere to fallibilism, recognizing of all human knowledge that "None of our beliefs are quite true; all have at least a penumbra of vagueness and error," and that the only means of progressing ever-closer to the truth is to never assume certainty, but always examine all sides and try to reach a conclusion objectively.

Free will

In his search for truth and assorted principles of psychology, William James developed his two-stage model of free will. In his model, he tries to explain how it is people come to the making of a decision and what factors are involved in it. He firstly defines our basic ability to choose as free will. Then he specifies our two factors as chance and choice. "James's two-stage model effectively separates chance (the in-deterministic free element) from choice (an arguably determinate decision that follows causally from one's character, values, and especially feelings and desires at the moment of decision)."[45]

James argues that the question of free will revolves around "chance." The idea of chance is that some events are possibilities, things that could happen but are not guaranteed. Chance is a neutral term (it is, in this case, neither inherently positive nor "intrinsically irrational and preposterous," connotations it usually has); the only information it gives about the events to which it applies is that they are disconnected from other things – they are "not controlled, secured, or necessitated by other things" before they happen.[46] Chance is made possible regarding our actions because our amount of effort is subject to change. If the amount of effort we put into something is predetermined, our actions are predetermined.[47]

Free will in relation to effort also balances "ideals and propensities—the things you see as best versus the things that are easiest to do". Without effort, "the propensity is stronger than the ideal." To act according to your ideals, you must resist the things that are easiest, and this can only be done with effort.[48] James states that the free will question is therefore simple: "it relates solely to the amount of effort of attention or consent which we can at any time put forth."[47]

Chance is the 'free element,' that part of the model we have no control over. James says that in the sequence of the model, chance comes before choice. In the moment of decision we are given the chance to make a decision and then the choice is what we do (or do not do) regarding the decision.

When it comes to choice, James says we make a choice based on different experiences. It comes from our own past experiences, the observations of others, or:[45]

A supply of ideas of the various movements that are … left in the memory by experiences of their involuntary performance is thus the first prerequisite of the voluntary life.

What James describes is that once you've made a decision in the past, the experience is stockpiled into your memory where it can be referenced the next time a decision must be made and will be drawn from as a positive solution. However, in his development of the design, James also struggled with being able to prove that free will is actually free or predetermined.

People can make judgements of regret, moral approval and moral disapproval, and if those are absent, then that means our will is predetermined. An example of this is "James says the problem is a very 'personal' one and that he cannot personally conceive of the universe as a place where murder must happen."[49] Essentially, if there were no regrets or judgments then all the bad stuff would not be considered bad, only as predetermined because there are no options of 'good' and 'bad'. "The free will option is pragmatically truer because it better accommodates the judgments of regret and morality."[49] Overall, James uses this line of reasoning to prove that our will is indeed free: because of our morality codes, and the conceivable alternate universes where a decision has been regarded different than what we chose.

In "The Will to Believe", James simply asserted that his will was free. As his first act of freedom, he said, he chose to believe his will was free. He was encouraged to do this by reading Charles Renouvier, whose work convinced James to convert from monism to pluralism. In his diary entry of April 30, 1870, James wrote:[50]

I think that yesterday was a crisis in my life. I finished the first part of Renouvier's second Essais and see no reason why his definition of free will—"the sustaining of a thought because I choose to when I might have other thoughts"—need be the definition of an illusion. At any rate, I will assume for the present—until next year—that it is no illusion. My first act of free will shall be to believe in free will.

In 1884, James set the terms for all future discussions of determinism and compatibilism in the free will debates with his lecture to Harvard Divinity School students published as "The Dilemma of Determinism".[51] In this talk he defined the common terms hard determinism and soft determinism (now more commonly called compatibilism).[51]

Old-fashioned determinism was what we may call hard determinism. It did not shrink from such words as fatality, bondage of the will, necessitation, and the like. Nowadays, we have a soft determinism which abhors harsh words, and, repudiating fatality, necessity, and even predetermination, says that its real name is freedom; for freedom is only necessity understood, and bondage to the highest is identical with true freedom.[52]: 149 

James called compatibilism a "quagmire of evasion,"[52]: 149  just as the ideas of Thomas Hobbes and David Hume—that free will was simply freedom from external coercion—were called a "wretched subterfuge" by Immanuel Kant.

Indeterminism is "the belief in freedom [which] holds that there is some degree of possibility that is not necessitated by the rest of reality."[53] The word "some" in this definition is crucial in James's argument because it leaves room for a higher power, as it does not require that all events be random. Specifically, indeterminism does not say that no events are guaranteed or connected to previous events; instead, it says that some events are not guaranteed – some events are up to chance.[48] In James's model of free will, choice is deterministic, determined by the person making it, and it "follows casually from one's character, values, and especially feelings and desires at the moment of decision."[54] Chance, on the other hand, is indeterministic, and pertains to possibilities that could happen but are not guaranteed.[46] James described chance as neither hard nor soft determinism, but "indeterminism":[52]: 153 

The stronghold of the determinist argument is the antipathy to the idea of chance ... This notion of alternative possibility, this admission that any one of several things may come to pass is, after all, only a roundabout name for chance.

James asked the students to consider his choice for walking home from Lowell Lecture Hall after his talk:[52]: 155 

What is meant by saying that my choice of which way to walk home after the lecture is ambiguous and matter of chance? ... It means that both Divinity Avenue and Oxford Street are called but only one, and that one either one, shall be chosen.

With this simple example, James laid out a two-stage decision process with chance in a present time of random alternatives, leading to a choice of one possibility that transforms an ambiguous future into a simple unalterable past. James's two-stage model separates chance (undetermined alternative possibilities) from choice (the free action of the individual, on which randomness has no effect). Subsequent thinkers using this model include Henri Poincaré, Arthur Holly Compton, and Karl Popper.

Philosophy of religion

 
Excerpt

James did important work in philosophy of religion. In his Gifford Lectures at the University of Edinburgh he provided a wide-ranging account of The Varieties of Religious Experience (1902) and interpreted them according to his pragmatic leanings. Some of the important claims he makes in this regard:

  • Religious genius (experience) should be the primary topic in the study of religion, rather than religious institutions—since institutions are merely the social descendant of genius.
  • The intense, even pathological varieties of experience (religious or otherwise) should be sought by psychologists, because they represent the closest thing to a microscope of the mind—that is, they show us in drastically enlarged form the normal processes of things.
  • In order to usefully interpret the realm of common, shared experience and history, we must each make certain "over-beliefs" in things which, while they cannot be proven on the basis of experience, help us to live fuller and better lives.
  • A variety of characteristics can be seen within a single individual. There are subconscious elements that compose the scattered fragments of a personality. This is the reflection of a greater dissociation which is the separation between science and religion.
  • Religious Mysticism is only one half of mysticism, the other half is composed of the insane and both of these are co-located in the 'great subliminal or transmarginal region'.[55]

James investigated mystical experiences throughout his life, leading him to experiment with chloral hydrate (1870), amyl nitrite (1875), nitrous oxide (1882), and peyote (1896).[citation needed] James claimed that it was only when he was under the influence of nitrous oxide that he was able to understand Hegel.[56] He concluded that while the revelations of the mystic hold true, they hold true only for the mystic; for others, they are certainly ideas to be considered, but can hold no claim to truth without personal experience of such. American Philosophy: An Encyclopedia classes him as one of several figures who "took a more pantheist or pandeist approach by rejecting views of God as separate from the world."[57]

Mysticism

William James provided a description of the mystical experience, in his famous collection of lectures published in 1902 as The Varieties of Religious Experience.[58] These criteria are as follows

  • Passivity – a feeling of being grasped and held by a superior power not under your own control.
  • Ineffability – no adequate way to use human language to describe the experience.
  • Noetic – universal truths revealed that are unable to be acquired anywhere else.
  • Transient – the mystical experience is only a temporary experience.

James's preference was to focus on human experience, leading to his research of the subconscious. This was the entryway for the awakening transformation of mystical states. Mystical states represent the peak of religious experience. This helped open James's inner process to self-discovery.

Instincts

Like Sigmund Freud, James was influenced by Charles Darwin's theory of natural selection.[59] At the core of James's theory of psychology, as defined in The Principles of Psychology (1890), was a system of "instincts". James wrote that humans had many instincts, even more than other animals.[59] These instincts, he said, could be overridden by experience and by each other, as many of the instincts were actually in conflict with each other.[59] In the 1920s, however, psychology turned away from evolutionary theory and embraced radical behaviorism.[59]

Theory of emotion

James is one of the two namesakes of the James–Lange theory of emotion, which he formulated independently of Carl Lange in the 1880s. The theory holds that emotion is the mind's perception of physiological conditions that result from some stimulus. In James's oft-cited example, it is not that we see a bear, fear it, and run; we see a bear and run; consequently, we fear the bear. Our mind's perception of the higher adrenaline level, heartbeat, etc. is the emotion.

This way of thinking about emotion has great consequences for the philosophy of aesthetics as well as to the philosophy and practice of education.[60] Here is a passage from his work, The Principles of Psychology, that spells out those consequences:

[W]e must immediately insist that aesthetic emotion, pure and simple, the pleasure given us by certain lines and masses, and combinations of colors and sounds, is an absolutely sensational experience, an optical or auricular feeling that is primary, and not due to the repercussion backwards of other sensations elsewhere consecutively aroused. To this simple primary and immediate pleasure in certain pure sensations and harmonious combinations of them, there may, it is true, be added secondary pleasures; and in the practical enjoyment of works of art by the masses of mankind these secondary pleasures play a great part. The more classic one's taste is, however, the less relatively important are the secondary pleasures felt to be, in comparison with those of the primary sensation as it comes in. Classicism and romanticism have their battles over this point.

The theory of emotion was also independently developed in Italy by the anthropologist Giuseppe Sergi.[61][62]

William James's bear

From Joseph LeDoux's description of William James's Emotion:[63]

Why do we run away if we notice that we are in danger? Because we are afraid of what will happen if we don't. This obvious answer to a seemingly trivial question has been the central concern of a century-old debate about the nature of our emotions.

It all began in 1884 when William James published an article titled "What Is an Emotion?"[64]

The article appeared in a philosophy journal called Mind, as there were no psychology journals yet. It was important, not because it definitively answered the question it raised, but because of the way in which James phrased his response. He conceived of an emotion in terms of a sequence of events that starts with the occurrence of an arousing stimulus (the sympathetic nervous system or the parasympathetic nervous system); and ends with a passionate feeling, a conscious emotional experience. A major goal of emotion research is still to elucidate this stimulus-to-feeling sequence—to figure out what processes come between the stimulus and the feeling.

James set out to answer his question by asking another: do we run from a bear because we are afraid or are we afraid because we run? He proposed that the obvious answer, that we run because we are afraid, was wrong, and instead argued that we are afraid because we run:

Our natural way of thinking about … emotions is that the mental perception of some fact excites the mental affection called emotion, and that this latter state of mind gives rise to the bodily expression. My theory, on the contrary, is that the bodily changes follow directly the perception of the exciting fact, and that our feeling of the same changes as they occur IS the emotion (called 'feeling' by Damasio).

The essence of James's proposal was simple. It was premised on the fact that emotions are often accompanied by bodily responses (racing heart, tight stomach, sweaty palms, tense muscles, and so on; sympathetic nervous system) and that we can sense what is going on inside our body much the same as we can sense what is going on in the outside world. According to James, emotions feel different from other states of mind because they have these bodily responses that give rise to internal sensations, and different emotions feel different from one another because they are accompanied by different bodily responses and sensations. For example, when we see James's bear, we run away. During this act of escape, the body goes through a physiological upheaval: blood pressure rises, heart rate increases, pupils dilate, palms sweat, muscles contract in certain ways (evolutionary, innate defense mechanisms). Other kinds of emotional situations will result in different bodily upheavals. In each case, the physiological responses return to the brain in the form of bodily sensations, and the unique pattern of sensory feedback gives each emotion its unique quality. Fear feels different from anger or love because it has a different physiological signature (the parasympathetic nervous system for love). The mental aspect of emotion, the feeling, is a slave to its physiology, not vice versa: we do not tremble because we are afraid or cry because we feel sad; we are afraid because we tremble and are sad because we cry.

Philosophy of history

One of the long-standing schisms in the philosophy of history concerns the role of individuals in social change.

One faction sees individuals (as seen in Dickens' A Tale of Two Cities and Thomas Carlyle's The French Revolution, A History) as the motive power of history, and the broader society as the page on which they write their acts. The other sees society as moving according to holistic principles or laws, and sees individuals as its more-or-less willing pawns. In 1880, James waded into this controversy with "Great Men, Great Thoughts, and the Environment", an essay published in the Atlantic Monthly. He took Carlyle's side, but without Carlyle's one-sided emphasis on the political/military sphere, upon heroes as the founders or overthrowers of states and empires.

A philosopher, according to James, must accept geniuses as a given entity the same way as a biologist accepts as an entity Darwin's "spontaneous variations". The role of an individual will depend on the degree of its conformity with the social environment, epoch, moment, etc.[65]

James introduces a notion of receptivities of the moment. The societal mutations from generation to generation are determined (directly or indirectly) mainly by the acts or examples of individuals whose genius was so adapted to the receptivities of the moment or whose accidental position of authority was so critical that they became ferments, initiators of movements, setters of precedent or fashion, centers of corruption, or destroyers of other persons, whose gifts, had they had free play, would have led society in another direction.[66]

View on spiritualism and associationism

 
James in a séance with a spiritualist medium

James studied closely the schools of thought known as associationism and spiritualism. The view of an associationist is that each experience that one has leads to another, creating a chain of events. The association does not tie together two ideas, but rather physical objects.[67] This association occurs on an atomic level. Small physical changes occur in the brain which eventually form complex ideas or associations. Thoughts are formed as these complex ideas work together and lead to new experiences. Isaac Newton and David Hartley both were precursors to this school of thought, proposing such ideas as "physical vibrations in the brain, spinal cord, and nerves are the basis of all sensations, all ideas, and all motions …"[68] James disagreed with associationism in that he believed it to be too simple. He referred to associationism as "psychology without a soul"[69] because there is nothing from within creating ideas; they just arise by associating objects with one another.

On the other hand, a spiritualist believes that mental events are attributed to the soul. Whereas in associationism, ideas and behaviors are separate, in spiritualism, they are connected. Spiritualism encompasses the term innatism, which suggests that ideas cause behavior. Ideas of past behavior influence the way a person will act in the future; these ideas are all tied together by the soul. Therefore, an inner soul causes one to have a thought, which leads them to perform a behavior, and memory of past behaviors determine how one will act in the future.[69]

James had a strong opinion about these schools of thought. He was, by nature, a pragmatist and thus took the view that one should use whatever parts of theories make the most sense and can be proven.[68] Therefore, he recommended breaking apart spiritualism and associationism and using the parts of them that make the most sense. James believed that each person has a soul, which exists in a spiritual universe, and leads a person to perform the behaviors they do in the physical world.[68] James was influenced by Emanuel Swedenborg, who first introduced him to this idea. James stated that, although it does appear that humans use associations to move from one event to the next, this cannot be done without this soul tying everything together. For, after an association has been made, it is the person who decides which part of it to focus on, and therefore determines in which direction following associations will lead.[67] Associationism is too simple in that it does not account for decision-making of future behaviors, and memory of what worked well and what did not. Spiritualism, however, does not demonstrate actual physical representations for how associations occur. James combined the views of spiritualism and associationism to create his own way of thinking. James discussed tender-minded thinkers as religious, optimistic, dogmatic, and monistic. Tough-minded thinkers were irreligious, pessimistic, pluralists, and skeptical. Healthy-minded individuals were seen as natural believers by having faith in God and universal order. People who focused on human miseries and suffering were noted as sick souls.

James was a founding member and vice president of the American Society for Psychical Research.[70] The lending of his name made Leonora Piper a famous medium. In 1885, the year after the death of his young son, James had his first sitting with Piper at the suggestion of his mother-in-law.[71] He was soon convinced that Piper knew things she could only have discovered by supernatural means. He expressed his belief in Piper by saying, "If you wish to upset the law that all crows are black, it is enough if you prove that one crow is white. My white crow is Mrs. Piper."[72] However, James did not believe that Piper was in contact with spirits. After evaluating sixty-nine reports of Piper's mediumship he considered the hypothesis of telepathy as well as Piper obtaining information about her sitters by natural means such as her memory recalling information. According to James the "spirit-control" hypothesis of her mediumship was incoherent, irrelevant and in cases demonstrably false.[73]

James held séances with Piper and was impressed by some of the details he was given; however, according to Massimo Polidoro a maid in the household of James was friendly with a maid in Piper's house and this may have been a source of information that Piper used for private details about James.[74] Bibliographers Frederick Burkhardt and Fredson Bowers who compiled the works of James wrote "It is thus possible that Mrs. Piper's knowledge of the James family was acquired from the gossip of servants and that the whole mystery rests on the failure of the people upstairs to realize that servants [downstairs] also have ears."[75]

James was convinced that the "future will corroborate" the existence of telepathy.[76] Psychologists such as James McKeen Cattell and Edward B. Titchener took issue with James's support for psychical research and considered his statements unscientific.[77][78] Cattell in a letter to James wrote that the "Society for Psychical Research is doing much to injure psychology".[79]

James's theory of the self

James's theory of the self divided a person's mental picture of self into two categories: the "Me" and the "I". The "Me" can be thought of as a separate object or individual a person refers to when describing their personal experiences; while the "I" is the self that knows who they are and what they have done in their life.[38] Both concepts are depicted in the statement; "I know it was me who ate the cookie." He called the "Me" part of self the "empirical me" and the "I" part "the pure Ego".[80] For James, the "I" part of self was the thinking self, which could not be further divided. He linked this part of the self to the soul of a person, or what is now thought of as the mind.[81] Educational theorists have been inspired in various ways by James's theory of self, and have developed various applications to curricular and pedagogical theory and practice.[60]

James further divided the "Me" part of self into: a material, a social, and a spiritual self, as below.[80]

Material self

The material self consists of things that belong to a person or entities that a person belongs to. Thus, things like the body, family, clothes, money, and such make up the material self. For James, the core of the material self was the body.[81] Second to the body, James felt a person's clothes were important to the material self. He believed a person's clothes were one way they expressed who they felt they were; or clothes were a way to show status, thus contributing to forming and maintaining one's self-image.[81] Money and family are critical parts of the material self. James felt that if one lost a family member, a part of who they are was lost also. Money figured in one's material self in a similar way. If a person had significant money then lost it, who they were as a person changed as well.[81]

Social self

Our social selves are who we are in a given social situation. For James, people change how they act depending on the social situation that they are in. James believed that people had as many social selves as they did social situations they participated in.[81] For example, a person may act in a different way at work when compared to how that same person may act when they are out with a group of friends. James also believed that in a given social group, an individual's social self may be divided even further.[81] An example of this would be, in the social context of an individual's work environment, the difference in behavior when that individual is interacting with their boss versus their behavior when interacting with a co-worker.

Spiritual self

For James, the spiritual self was who we are at our core. It is more concrete or permanent than the other two selves. The spiritual self is our subjective and most intimate self. Aspects of a spiritual self include things like personality, core values, and conscience that do not typically change throughout an individual's lifetime. The spiritual self involves introspection, or looking inward to deeper spiritual, moral, or intellectual questions without the influence of objective thoughts.[81] For James, achieving a high level of understanding of who we are at our core, or understanding our spiritual selves is more rewarding than satisfying the needs of the social and material selves.

Pure ego

What James refers to as the "I" self. For James, the pure ego is what provides the thread of continuity between our past, present, and future selves. The pure ego's perception of consistent individual identity arises from a continuous stream of consciousness.[82] James believed that the pure ego was similar to what we think of as the soul, or the mind. The pure ego was not a substance and therefore could not be examined by science.[38]

Notable works

  • The Principles of Psychology, 2 vols. (1890), Dover Publications 1950, vol. 1: ISBN 0-486-20381-6, vol. 2: ISBN 0-486-20382-4
  • Psychology (Briefer Course) (1892), University of Notre Dame Press 1985: ISBN 0-268-01557-0, Dover Publications 2001: ISBN 0-486-41604-6
  • Is Life Worth Living? (1895), the seminal lecture delivered at Harvard on April 15, 1895
  • The Will to Believe, and Other Essays in Popular Philosophy (1897)
  • Human Immortality: Two Supposed Objections to the Doctrine (the Ingersoll Lecture, 1897)
    • The Will to Believe, Human Immortality (1956) Dover Publications, ISBN 0-486-20291-7
  • Talks to Teachers on Psychology: and to Students on Some of Life's Ideals (1899), Dover Publications 2001: ISBN 0-486-41964-9, IndyPublish.com 2005: ISBN 1-4219-5806-6
  • The Varieties of Religious Experience: A Study in Human Nature (1902), ISBN 0-14-039034-0
  • Pragmatism: A New Name for Some Old Ways of Thinking (1907), Hackett Publishing 1981: ISBN 0-915145-05-7, Dover 1995: ISBN 0-486-28270-8
  • A Pluralistic Universe (1909), Hibbert Lectures, University of Nebraska Press 1996: ISBN 0-8032-7591-9
  • The Meaning of Truth: A Sequel to "Pragmatism" (1909), Prometheus Books, 1997: ISBN 1-57392-138-6
  • Some Problems of Philosophy: A Beginning of an Introduction to Philosophy (1911), University of Nebraska Press 1996: ISBN 0-8032-7587-0
  • Memories and Studies (1911), Reprint Services Corp: 1992: ISBN 0-7812-3481-6
  • Essays in Radical Empiricism (1912), Dover Publications 2003, ISBN 0-486-43094-4
    • critical edition, Frederick Burkhardt and Fredson Bowers, editors. Harvard University Press 1976: ISBN 0-674-26717-6 (includes commentary, notes, enumerated emendations, appendices with English translation of "La Notion de Conscience")
  • Letters of William James, 2 vols. (1920)
  • Collected Essays and Reviews (1920)
  • Ralph Barton Perry, The Thought and Character of William James, 2 vols. (1935), Vanderbilt University Press 1996 reprint: ISBN 0-8265-1279-8 (contains some 500 letters by William James not found in the earlier edition of the Letters of William James)
  • William James on Psychical Research (1960)
  • The Correspondence of William James, 12 vols. (1992–2004) University of Virginia Press, ISBN 0-8139-2318-2
  • "The Dilemma of Determinism"
  • William James on Habit, Will, Truth, and the Meaning of Life, James Sloan Allen, ed. Frederic C. Beil, Publisher, ISBN 978-1-929490-45-5

Collections

Psychology: Briefer Course (rev. and condensed Principles of Psychology), The Will to Believe and Other Essays in Popular Philosophy, Talks to Teachers and Students, Essays (nine others)
The Varieties of Religious Experience, Pragmatism, A Pluralistic Universe, The Meaning of Truth, Some Problems of Philosophy, Essays
  • The Writings of William James: A Comprehensive Edition (1978). University of Chicago Press, 912 pp., ISBN 0-226-39188-4
Pragmatism, Essays in Radical Empiricism, and A Pluralistic Universe complete; plus selections from other works
  • In 1975, Harvard University Press began publication of a standard edition of The Works of William James.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ See his Defense of a Pragmatic Notion of Truth, written to counter criticisms of his Pragmatism's Conception of Truth (1907) lecture.

References

Citations

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  78. ^ Kimble, Gregory A; Wertheimer, Michael; White, Charlotte. (2013). Portraits of Pioneers in Psychology. Psychology Press. p. 23. ISBN 0-8058-0620-2
  79. ^ Goodwin, C. James. (2015). A History of Modern Psychology. Wiley. p. 154. ISBN 978-1-118-83375-9
  80. ^ a b Cooper, W. E. (1992). "William James's theory of the self". Monist 75(4), 504.
  81. ^ a b c d e f g . Archived from the original on December 6, 2013. Retrieved December 3, 2013.
  82. ^ "Introduction to William James". www.uky.edu. July 31, 2013.

Sources

  • Essays Philosophical and Psychological in Honor of William James, by his Colleagues at Columbia University (London, 1908)

Further reading

  • James Sloan Allen, ed., William James on Habit, Will, Truth, and the Meaning of Life (2014). Frederic C. Beil, Publisher, ISBN 978-1-929490-45-5
  • Margo Bistis, "Remnant of the Future: William James' Automated Utopia", in Norman M. Klein and Margo Bistis, The Imaginary 20th Century (Karlsruhe: ZKM, 2016).
  • Émile Boutroux, William James (New York, 1912)
  • Werner Bloch, Der Pragmatismus von James und Schiller nebst Exkursen über Weltanschauung und über die Hypothese (Leipzig, 1913)
  • K. A. Busch, William James als Religionsphilosoph (Göttingen, 1911)
  • Jacques Barzun. A Stroll with William James (1983). Harper and Row: ISBN 0-226-03869-6
  • Deborah Blum. Ghost Hunters: William James and the Search for Scientific Proof of Life After Death (2006). Penguin Press, ISBN 1-59420-090-4
  • Wesley Cooper. The Unity of William James's Thought (2002). Vanderbilt University Press, ISBN 0-8265-1387-5
  • Howard M. Feinstein. Becoming William James (1984). Cornell University Press, ISBN 978-0-8014-8642-5
  • Théodore Flournoy, La Philosophie de William James (Saint-Blaise, 1911)
  • Sergio Franzese, The Ethics of Energy. William James's Moral Philosophy in Focus, Ontos Verlag, 2008
  • Sergio Franzese & Felicitas Krämer (eds.), Fringes of Religious Experience. Cross-perspectives on William James's Varieties of Religious Experience, Frankfurt / Lancaster, ontos verlag, Process Thought XII, 2007
  • Peter Hare, Michel Weber, James K. Swindler, Oana-Maria Pastae, Cerasel Cuteanu (eds.), International Perspectives on Pragmatism, Newcastle upon Tyne, Cambridge Scholars Publishing, 2009
  • James Huneker, "A Philosophy for Philistines" in his The Pathos of Distance (New York, 1913)
  • Henry James, A Small Boy and Others (1913) and Notes of a Son and Brother (1914)
  • Amy Kittelstrom, The Religion of Democracy: Seven Liberals and the American Moral Tradition. New York: Penguin, 2015.
  • H. V. Knox, Philosophy of William James (London, 1914)
  • R. W. B. Lewis The Jameses: A Family Narrative (1991) Farrar, Straus & Giroux
  • Louis Menand. The Metaphysical Club: A Story of Ideas in America (2001). Farrar, Straus, and Giroux, ISBN 0-374-52849-7.
  • Ménard, Analyse et critique des principes de la psychologie de W. James (Paris, 1911) analyzes the lives and relationship between James, Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr., Charles Sanders Peirce, and John Dewey.
  • Gerald E. Myers. William James: His Life and Thought (1986). Yale University Press, 2001, paperback: ISBN 0-300-08917-1. Focuses on his psychology; includes 230 pages of notes.
  • Giuseppe Sergi L'origine dei fenomeni psichici e loro significazione biologica, Milano, Fratelli Dumolard, 1885.
  • Giuseppe Sergi Principi di Psicologie: Dolore e Piacere; Storia Naturale dei Sentimenti, Milano, Fratelli Dumolard, 1894.
  • James Pawelski. The Dynamic Individualism of William James (2007). SUNY press, ISBN 0-7914-7239-6.
  • R. B. Perry, Present Philosophical Tendencies (New York, 1912)
  • Robert D. Richardson. William James: In the Maelstrom of American Modernism (2006). Houghton Mifflin, ISBN 0-618-43325-2
  • Robert D. Richardson, ed. The Heart of William James (2010). Harvard U. Press, ISBN 978-0-674-05561-2
  • Jane Roberts. The Afterdeath Journal of an American Philosopher: The View of William James (1978. Prentice-Hall. ISBN 0-13-018515-9.)
  • Barbara Ross, chapter "William James: A Prime Mover of the Psychoanalytic Movement in America", in Psychoanalysis, Psychotherapy, and the New England Medical Scene: 1894-1944 (Science History Publications, New York, 1978) ISBN 9780882021690
  • Josiah Royce, William James and Other Essays on the Philosophy of Life (New York, 1911)
  • J. Michael Tilley, "William James: Living Forward and the Development of Radical Empiricism," In Kierkegaard's Influence on Philosophy: Anglophone Philosophy, edited by Jon Stewart, 2012, Ashgate Publishing, 87–98.
  • Linda Simon. Genuine Reality: A Life of William James (1998). Harcourt Brace & Company, ISBN 0-226-75859-1
  • Michel Weber. Whitehead's Pancreativism. Jamesian Applications. Ontos Verlag, 2011, ISBN 978-386838-103-0
  • Michel Weber, "On Religiousness and Religion. Huxley's Reading of Whitehead's Religion in the Making in the Light of James' Varieties of Religious Experience", Jerome Meckier and Bernfried Nugel (eds.), Aldous Huxley Annual. A Journal of Twentieth-Century Thought and Beyond, Volume 5, Münster, LIT Verlag, March 2005, pp. 117–32.
  • Michel Weber, "James's Mystical Body in the Light of the Transmarginal Field of Consciousness", in Sergio Franzese & Felicitas Krämer (eds.), Fringes of Religious Experience. Cross-perspectives on William James's Varieties of Religious Experience, Frankfurt / Lancaster, Ontos Verlag, Process Thought XII, 2007, pp. 7–37.
  • Wiseman, R. (2012). Rip it up: The radically new approach to changing your life. London, UK: Macmillan

External links

  • William James Society
  • Emory University: William James – major collection of essays and works online
  • William James correspondence from the Historic Psychiatry Collection, Menninger Archives, Kansas Historical Society
  •  – online exhibition from Houghton Library
  • Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy: William James
  • William James on Information Philosopher
  • Booknotes interview with Linda Simon on Genuine Reality: A Life of William James, June 7, 1998
  • New York Times obituary
  • Works by William James at Project Gutenberg
  • Works by or about William James at Internet Archive
  • Works by William James at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)  
  • William James at Find a Grave  

william, james, this, article, about, philosopher, psychologist, other, people, with, same, name, disambiguation, january, 1842, august, 1910, american, philosopher, historian, psychologist, first, educator, offer, psychology, course, united, states, james, co. This article is about the philosopher and psychologist For other people with the same name see William James disambiguation William James January 11 1842 August 26 1910 was an American philosopher historian and psychologist and the first educator to offer a psychology course in the United States 4 James is considered to be a leading thinker of the late 19th century one of the most influential philosophers of the United States and the Father of American psychology 5 6 7 William JamesJames in 1903Born 1842 01 11 January 11 1842New York City USDiedAugust 26 1910 1910 08 26 aged 68 Tamworth New Hampshire USAlma materHarvard University MD Era19th 20th century philosophyRegionWestern philosophySchoolPragmatismfunctional psychologyradical empiricismInstitutionsHarvard UniversityNotable studentsEdwin HoltLearned HandRalph Barton PerryMain interestsPragmatismpsychologyphilosophy of religionepistemologymeaningNotable ideasWill to believe doctrinepragmatic theory of truthradical empiricismJames Lange theory of emotionpsychologist s fallacybrain usage theorysoft determinismdilemma of determinismstream of consciousnessJames s theory of the selfthe term multiverseInfluences Louis AgassizWilliam Kingdon Clifford 1 David HartleyHermann HelmholtzDavid HumePierre JanetJules LequierErnst MachRalph Waldo EmersonJohn Stuart MillCharles Sanders PeirceCharles Bernard RenouvierBernhard RiemannF C S SchillerAfrikan Spir 2 Emanuel SwedenborgInfluenced Carl JungHenri BergsonJimmy CarterMorris Raphael CohenJohn DeweyW E B Du BoisEmile DurkheimRobert FrostMarilynne RobinsonEdwin HoltEdmund HusserlLudwig WittgensteinC Wright MillsGertrude Stein 3 Hilary PutnamRichard RortyBertrand RussellGeorge SantayanaF C S SchillerAlfred SchutzAlfred North WhiteheadAntonio DamasioWilliam SheldonAlong with Charles Sanders Peirce James established the philosophical school known as pragmatism and is also cited as one of the founders of functional psychology A Review of General Psychology analysis published in 2002 ranked James as the 14th most eminent psychologist of the 20th century 8 A survey published in American Psychologist in 1991 ranked James s reputation in second place 9 after Wilhelm Wundt who is widely regarded as the founder of experimental psychology 10 11 James also developed the philosophical perspective known as radical empiricism James s work has influenced philosophers and academics such as Emile Durkheim W E B Du Bois Edmund Husserl Bertrand Russell Ludwig Wittgenstein Hilary Putnam Richard Rorty and Marilynne Robinson 12 Born into a wealthy family James was the son of the Swedenborgian theologian Henry James Sr and the brother of both the prominent novelist Henry James and the diarist Alice James James trained as a physician and taught anatomy at Harvard but never practiced medicine Instead he pursued his interests in psychology and then philosophy He wrote widely on many topics including epistemology education metaphysics psychology religion and mysticism Among his most influential books are The Principles of Psychology a groundbreaking text in the field of psychology Essays in Radical Empiricism an important text in philosophy and The Varieties of Religious Experience an investigation of different forms of religious experience including theories on mind cure 13 Contents 1 Early life 2 Career 3 Family 4 Writings 5 Epistemology 5 1 Pragmatism and cash value 5 2 Will to believe doctrine 6 Free will 7 Philosophy of religion 8 Mysticism 9 Instincts 10 Theory of emotion 10 1 William James s bear 11 Philosophy of history 12 View on spiritualism and associationism 13 James s theory of the self 13 1 Material self 13 2 Social self 13 3 Spiritual self 13 4 Pure ego 14 Notable works 14 1 Collections 15 See also 16 Notes 17 References 17 1 Citations 17 2 Sources 18 Further reading 19 External linksEarly life Edit William James in Brazil 1865 William James was born at the Astor House in New York City on January 11 1842 He was the son of Henry James Sr a noted and independently wealthy Swedenborgian theologian well acquainted with the literary and intellectual elites of his day The intellectual brilliance of the James family milieu and the remarkable epistolary talents of several of its members have made them a subject of continuing interest to historians biographers and critics William James received an eclectic trans Atlantic education developing fluency in both German and French Education in the James household encouraged cosmopolitanism The family made two trips to Europe while William James was still a child setting a pattern that resulted in thirteen more European journeys during his life James wished to pursue painting his early artistic bent led to an apprenticeship in the studio of William Morris Hunt in Newport Rhode Island but his father urged him to become a physician instead Since this did not align with James s interests he stated that he wanted to specialize in physiology Once he figured this was also not what he wanted to do he then announced he was going to specialize in the nervous system and psychology James then switched in 1861 to scientific studies at the Lawrence Scientific School of Harvard College In his early adulthood James suffered from a variety of physical ailments including those of the eyes back stomach and skin He was also tone deaf 14 He was subject to a variety of psychological symptoms which were diagnosed at the time as neurasthenia and which included periods of depression during which he contemplated suicide for months on end Two younger brothers Garth Wilkinson Wilky and Robertson Bob fought in the Civil War James himself was an advocate of peace He suggested that instead of youth serving in the military that they serve the public in a term of service to get the childishness knocked out of them The other three siblings William Henry and Alice James all suffered from periods of invalidism citation needed He took up medical studies at Harvard Medical School in 1864 according to his brother Henry James the author He took a break in the spring of 1865 to join naturalist Louis Agassiz on a scientific expedition up the Amazon River but aborted his trip after eight months as he suffered bouts of severe seasickness and mild smallpox His studies were interrupted once again due to illness in April 1867 He traveled to Germany in search of a cure and remained there until November 1868 at that time he was 26 years old During this period he began to publish reviews of his works appeared in literary periodicals such as the North American Review citation needed James finally earned his MD degree in June 1869 but he never practiced medicine What he called his soul sickness would only be resolved in 1872 after an extended period of philosophical searching He married Alice Gibbens in 1878 In 1882 he joined the Theosophical Society 15 James s time in Germany proved intellectually fertile helping him find that his true interests lay not in medicine but in philosophy and psychology Later in 1902 he would write I originally studied medicine in order to be a physiologist but I drifted into psychology and philosophy from a sort of fatality I never had any philosophic instruction the first lecture on psychology I ever heard being the first I ever gave 16 In 1875 1876 James Henry Pickering Bowditch 1840 1911 Charles Pickering Putnam 1844 1914 and James Jackson Putnam 1846 1918 founded the Putnam Camp at St Huberts Essex County New York 17 Career EditJames interacted with a wide array of writers and scholars throughout his life including his godfather Ralph Waldo Emerson his godson William James Sidis as well as Charles Sanders Peirce Bertrand Russell Josiah Royce Ernst Mach John Dewey Macedonio Fernandez Walter Lippmann Mark Twain Horatio Alger G Stanley Hall Henri Bergson Carl Jung Jane Addams and Sigmund Freud James spent almost all of his academic career at Harvard He was appointed instructor in physiology for the spring 1873 term instructor in anatomy and physiology in 1873 assistant professor of psychology in 1876 assistant professor of philosophy in 1881 full professor in 1885 endowed chair in psychology in 1889 return to philosophy in 1897 and emeritus professor of philosophy in 1907 James studied medicine physiology and biology and began to teach in those subjects but was drawn to the scientific study of the human mind at a time when psychology was constituting itself as a science James s acquaintance with the work of figures like Hermann Helmholtz in Germany and Pierre Janet in France facilitated his introduction of courses in scientific psychology at Harvard University He taught his first experimental psychology course at Harvard in the 1875 1876 academic year 18 During his Harvard years James joined in philosophical discussions and debates with Charles Peirce Oliver Wendell Holmes and Chauncey Wright that evolved into a lively group informally known as The Metaphysical Club in 1872 Louis Menand 2001 suggested that this Club provided a foundation for American intellectual thought for decades to come James joined the Anti Imperialist League in 1898 in opposition to the United States annexation of the Philippines William James and Josiah Royce near James s country home in Chocorua New Hampshire in September 1903 James s daughter Peggy took the picture On hearing the camera click James cried out Royce you re being photographed Look out I say Damn the Absolute Among James s students at Harvard University were Boris Sidis Theodore Roosevelt George Santayana W E B Du Bois G Stanley Hall Ralph Barton Perry Gertrude Stein Horace Kallen Morris Raphael Cohen Walter Lippmann Alain Locke C I Lewis and Mary Whiton Calkins Antiquarian bookseller Gabriel Wells tutored under him at Harvard in the late 1890s 19 His students enjoyed his brilliance and his manner of teaching was free of personal arrogance They remember him for his kindness and humble attitude His respectful attitude towards them speaks well of his character 20 Following his January 1907 retirement from Harvard James continued to write and lecture publishing Pragmatism A Pluralistic Universe and The Meaning of Truth James was increasingly afflicted with cardiac pain during his last years It worsened in 1909 while he worked on a philosophy text unfinished but posthumously published as Some Problems in Philosophy He sailed to Europe in the spring of 1910 to take experimental treatments which proved unsuccessful and returned home on August 18 His heart failed on August 26 1910 at his home in Chocorua New Hampshire 21 He was buried in the family plot in Cambridge Cemetery Cambridge Massachusetts He was one of the strongest proponents of the school of functionalism in psychology and of pragmatism in philosophy He was a founder of the American Society for Psychical Research as well as a champion of alternative approaches to healing In 1884 and 1885 he became president of the British Society for Psychical Research for which he wrote in Mind and in the Psychological Review 22 He challenged his professional colleagues not to let a narrow mindset prevent an honest appraisal of those beliefs In an empirical study by Haggbloom et al using six criteria such as citations and recognition James was found to be the 14th most eminent psychologist of the 20th century 23 Family EditWilliam James was the son of Henry James Senior of Albany and Mary Robertson Walsh He had four siblings Henry the novelist Garth Wilkinson Robertson and Alice 24 William became engaged to Alice Howe Gibbens on May 10 1878 they were married on July 10 They had 5 children Henry born May 18 1879 William June 17 1882 1961 Herman born 1884 died in infancy Margaret born March 1887 and Alexander the artist born December 22 1890 Most of William James s ancestors arrived in America from Scotland or Ireland in the 18th century Many of them settled in eastern New York or New Jersey All of James s ancestors were Protestant well educated and of character Within their communities they worked as farmers merchants and traders who were all heavily involved with their church The last ancestor to arrive in America was William James s paternal grandfather also named William James He came to America from Ballyjamesduff County Cavan Ireland in 1789 when he was 18 years old There is suspicion that he fled to America because his family tried to force him into the ministry After traveling to America with no money left he found a job at a store as a clerk After continuously working he was able to own the store himself As he traveled west to find more job opportunities he was involved in various jobs such as the salt industry and the Erie Canal project After being a significant worker in the Erie Canal project and helping Albany become a major center of trade he then became the first Vice President of the Albany Savings Bank William James grandfather went from being a poor Irish immigrant to one of the richest men in New York After his death his son Henry James inherited his fortune and lived in Europe and the United States searching for the meaning of life citation needed Writings EditWilliam James wrote voluminously throughout his life A non exhaustive bibliography of his writings compiled by John McDermott is 47 pages long 25 He gained widespread recognition with his monumental The Principles of Psychology 1890 totaling twelve hundred pages in two volumes which took twelve years to complete Psychology The Briefer Course was an 1892 abridgement designed as a less rigorous introduction to the field These works criticized both the English associationist school and the Hegelianism of his day as competing dogmatisms of little explanatory value and sought to re conceive the human mind as inherently purposive and selective President Jimmy Carter s Moral Equivalent of War Speech on April 17 1977 equating the United States 1970s energy crisis oil crisis and the changes and sacrifices Carter s proposed plans would require with the moral equivalent of war may have borrowed its title much of its theme and the memorable phrase from James s classic essay The Moral Equivalent of War derived from his last speech delivered at Stanford University in 1906 and published in 1910 in which James considered one of the classic problems of politics how to sustain political unity and civic virtue in the absence of war or a credible threat and which sounds a rallying cry for service in the interests of the individual and the nation 26 27 28 29 James was remembered as one of America s representative thinkers psychologist and philosopher William James was also one of the most influential writers on religion psychical research and self help He was told to have a few disciples that followed his writing since they were inspired and enriched by his research Epistemology Edit Portrait of William James by John La Farge circa 1859James defined true beliefs as those that prove useful to the believer His pragmatic theory of truth was a synthesis of correspondence theory of truth and coherence theory of truth with an added dimension Truth is verifiable to the extent that thoughts and statements correspond with actual things as well as the extent to which they hang together or cohere as pieces of a puzzle might fit together these are in turn verified by the observed results of the application of an idea to actual practice 30 31 The most ancient parts of truth also once were plastic They also were called true for human reasons They also mediated between still earlier truths and what in those days were novel observations Purely objective truth truth in whose establishment the function of giving human satisfaction in marrying previous parts of experience with newer parts played no role whatsoever is nowhere to be found The reasons why we call things true is the reason why they are true for to be true means only to perform this marriage function Pragmatism s Conception of Truth Pragmatism 1907 p 83 James held a world view in line with pragmatism declaring that the value of any truth was utterly dependent upon its use to the person who held it Additional tenets of James s pragmatism include the view that the world is a mosaic of diverse experiences that can only be properly interpreted and understood through an application of radical empiricism Radical empiricism not related to the everyday scientific empiricism asserts that the world and experience can never be halted for an entirely objective analysis the mind of the observer and the act of observation affect any empirical approach to truth The mind its experiences and nature are inseparable James s emphasis on diversity as the default human condition over and against duality especially Hegelian dialectical duality has maintained a strong influence in American culture James s description of the mind world connection which he described in terms of a stream of consciousness had a direct and significant impact on avant garde and modernist literature and art notably in the case of James Joyce In What Pragmatism Means 1906 James writes that the central point of his own doctrine of truth is in brief 32 Truths emerge from facts but they dip forward into facts again and add to them which facts again create or reveal new truth the word is indifferent and so on indefinitely The facts themselves meanwhile are not true They simply are Truth is the function of the beliefs that start and terminate among them Richard Rorty made the contested claim that James did not mean to give a theory of truth with this statement and that we should not regard it as such However other pragmatism scholars such as Susan Haack and Howard Mounce do not share Rorty s instrumentalist interpretation of James 33 In The Meaning of Truth 1909 James seems to speak of truth in relativistic terms in reference to critics of pragmatism The critic s trouble seems to come from his taking the word true irrelatively whereas the pragmatist always means true for him who experiences the workings 34 However James responded to critics accusing him of relativism scepticism or agnosticism and of believing only in relative truths To the contrary he supported an epistemological realism position i Pragmatism and cash value Edit Pragmatism is a philosophical approach that seeks to both define truth and resolve metaphysical issues William James demonstrates an application of his method in the form of a simple story 35 32 A live squirrel supposed to be clinging on one side of a tree trunk while over against the tree s opposite side a human being was imagined to stand This human witness tries to get sight of the squirrel by moving rapidly round the tree but no matter how fast he goes the squirrel moves as fast in the opposite direction and always keeps the tree between himself and the man so that never a glimpse of him is caught The resultant metaphysical problem now is this Does the man go round the squirrel or not James solves the issue by making a distinction between practical meaning That is the distinction between meanings of round Round in the sense that the man occupies the space north east south and west of the squirrel and round in the sense that the man occupies the space facing the squirrel s belly back and sides Depending on what the debaters meant by going round the answer would be clear From this example James derives the definition of the pragmatic method to settle metaphysical disputes one must simply make a distinction of practical consequences between notions then the answer is either clear or the dispute is idle 35 Both James and his colleague Charles Sanders Peirce coined the term cash value 36 When he said that the whole meaning of a clear conception consists in the entire set of its practical consequences he had in mind that a meaningful conception must have some sort of experiential cash value must somehow be capable of being related to some sort of collection of possible empirical observations under specifiable conditions A statement s truthfulness is verifiable through its correspondence to reality and its observable effects of putting the idea to practice For example James extends his Pragmatism to the hypothesis of God On pragmatic principles if the hypothesis of God works satisfactorily in the widest sense of the word it is true The problem is to build it out and determine it so that it will combine satisfactorily with all the other working truths 37 From this we also know that new truths must also correspond to already existent truths as well From the introduction by Bruce Kuklick 1981 p xiv to James s Pragmatism James went on to apply the pragmatic method to the epistemological problem of truth He would seek the meaning of true by examining how the idea functioned in our lives A belief was true he said if it worked for all of us and guided us expeditiously through our semihospitable world James was anxious to uncover what true beliefs amounted to in human life what their cash value was and what consequences they led to A belief was not a mental entity which somehow mysteriously corresponded to an external reality if the belief were true Beliefs were ways of acting with reference to a precarious environment and to say they were true was to say they were efficacious in this environment In this sense the pragmatic theory of truth applied Darwinian ideas in philosophy it made survival the test of intellectual as well as biological fitness James s book of lectures on pragmatism is arguably the most influential book of American philosophy The lectures inside depict his position on the subject In his sixth lecture he begins by defining truth as agreement with reality 30 With this James warns that there will be disagreements between pragmatics and intellectualists over the concepts of agreement and reality the last reasoning before thoughts settle and become autonomous for us However he contrasts this by supporting a more practical interpretation that a true idea or belief is one that we can blend with our thinking so that it can be justified through experiences 38 If theological ideas prove to have a value for concrete life they will be true for pragmatism in the sense of being good for so much For how much more they are true will depend entirely on their relations to the other truths that also have to be Acknowledged Pragmatism 1907 p 29 Whereby the agreement of truths with reality results in useful outcomes the reality with which truths must agree has three dimensions 38 12 matters of fact relations of ideas and the entire set of other truths to which we are committed According to James s pragmatic approach to belief knowledge is commonly viewed as a justified and true belief James will accept a view if its conception of truth is analyzed and justified through interpretation pragmatically As a matter of fact James s whole philosophy is of productive beliefs Belief in anything involves conceiving of how it is real but disbelief is the result when we dismiss something because it contradicts another thing we think of as real In his Sentiment of Rationality saying that crucial beliefs are not known is to doubt their truth even if it seems possible James names four postulates of rationality as valuable but unknowable God immorality freedom and moral duty 38 39 In contrast the weak side to pragmatism is that the best justification for a claim is whether it works However a claim that does not have outcomes cannot be justified or unjustified because it will not make a difference There can be no difference that doesn t make a difference Pragmatism 1907 p 45 When James moves on to then state that pragmatism s goal is ultimately to try to interpret each notion by tracing its respective practical consequences he does not clarify what he means by practical consequences 40 On the other hand his friend colleague and another key founder in establishing pragmatist beliefs Charles S Peirce dives deeper in defining these consequences For Peirce the consequences we are concerned with are general and intelligible 41 He further explains this in his 1878 paper How to Make Ideas Clear when he introduces a maxim that allows one to interpret consequences as grades of clarity and conception 42 Describing how everything is derived from perception Peirce uses the example of the doctrine of transubstantiation to show exactly how he defines practical consequences Protestants interpret the bread and wine of the Eucharist is flesh and blood in only a subjective sense while Catholics would label them as actual and divinely mystical properties of flesh via the body blood soul and divinity even with the physical properties remaining as bread and wine in appearance But to everyone there can be no knowledge of the wine and bread of the Eucharist unless it is established that either wine and bread possesses certain properties or that anything that is interpreted as the blood and body of Christ is the blood and body of Christ With this Peirce declares that our action has exclusive reference to what affects the senses and that we can mean nothing by transubstantiation than what has certain effects direct or indirect upon our senses 43 In this sense James s pragmatic influencer Peirce establishes that what counts as a practical consequence or effect is what can affect one s senses and what is comprehendible and fathomable in the natural world Yet James never works out his understanding of practical consequences as fully as Peirce did nor does he limit these consequences to the senses like Peirce 41 It then raises the question what does it mean to be practical Whether James means the greatest number of positive consequences in light of utilitarianism a consequence that considers other perspectives like his compromise of the tender and tough ways of thinking 44 or a completely different take altogether it is unclear to truly tell what consequence truly fits the pragmatic standard and what doesn t The closest James is able to get in explaining this idea is by telling his audience to weigh the difference it would practically make to anyone if one opinion over the other were true and although he attempts to clarify it he never specifies nor establishes the method in which one would weigh the difference between one opinion over the other 40 Thus the flaw in his argument appears in that it is difficult to fathom how he would determine these practical consequences which he continually refers to throughout his work to be measured or interpreted Will to believe doctrine Edit Main article The Will to Believe In William James s 1896 lecture titled The Will to Believe James defends the right to violate the principle of evidentialism in order to justify hypothesis venturing This idea foresaw 20th century objections to evidentialism and sought to ground justified belief in an unwavering principle that would prove more beneficial Through his philosophy of pragmatism William James justifies religious beliefs by using the results of his hypothetical venturing as evidence to support the hypothesis s truth Therefore this doctrine allows one to assume belief in a god and prove its existence by what the belief brings to one s life This was criticized by advocates of skepticism rationality like Bertrand Russell in Free Thought and Official Propaganda and Alfred Henry Lloyd with The Will to Doubt Both argued that one must always adhere to fallibilism recognizing of all human knowledge that None of our beliefs are quite true all have at least a penumbra of vagueness and error and that the only means of progressing ever closer to the truth is to never assume certainty but always examine all sides and try to reach a conclusion objectively Free will EditIn his search for truth and assorted principles of psychology William James developed his two stage model of free will In his model he tries to explain how it is people come to the making of a decision and what factors are involved in it He firstly defines our basic ability to choose as free will Then he specifies our two factors as chance and choice James s two stage model effectively separates chance the in deterministic free element from choice an arguably determinate decision that follows causally from one s character values and especially feelings and desires at the moment of decision 45 James argues that the question of free will revolves around chance The idea of chance is that some events are possibilities things that could happen but are not guaranteed Chance is a neutral term it is in this case neither inherently positive nor intrinsically irrational and preposterous connotations it usually has the only information it gives about the events to which it applies is that they are disconnected from other things they are not controlled secured or necessitated by other things before they happen 46 Chance is made possible regarding our actions because our amount of effort is subject to change If the amount of effort we put into something is predetermined our actions are predetermined 47 Free will in relation to effort also balances ideals and propensities the things you see as best versus the things that are easiest to do Without effort the propensity is stronger than the ideal To act according to your ideals you must resist the things that are easiest and this can only be done with effort 48 James states that the free will question is therefore simple it relates solely to the amount of effort of attention or consent which we can at any time put forth 47 Chance is the free element that part of the model we have no control over James says that in the sequence of the model chance comes before choice In the moment of decision we are given the chance to make a decision and then the choice is what we do or do not do regarding the decision When it comes to choice James says we make a choice based on different experiences It comes from our own past experiences the observations of others or 45 A supply of ideas of the various movements that are left in the memory by experiences of their involuntary performance is thus the first prerequisite of the voluntary life What James describes is that once you ve made a decision in the past the experience is stockpiled into your memory where it can be referenced the next time a decision must be made and will be drawn from as a positive solution However in his development of the design James also struggled with being able to prove that free will is actually free or predetermined People can make judgements of regret moral approval and moral disapproval and if those are absent then that means our will is predetermined An example of this is James says the problem is a very personal one and that he cannot personally conceive of the universe as a place where murder must happen 49 Essentially if there were no regrets or judgments then all the bad stuff would not be considered bad only as predetermined because there are no options of good and bad The free will option is pragmatically truer because it better accommodates the judgments of regret and morality 49 Overall James uses this line of reasoning to prove that our will is indeed free because of our morality codes and the conceivable alternate universes where a decision has been regarded different than what we chose In The Will to Believe James simply asserted that his will was free As his first act of freedom he said he chose to believe his will was free He was encouraged to do this by reading Charles Renouvier whose work convinced James to convert from monism to pluralism In his diary entry of April 30 1870 James wrote 50 I think that yesterday was a crisis in my life I finished the first part of Renouvier s second Essais and see no reason why his definition of free will the sustaining of a thought because I choose to when I might have other thoughts need be the definition of an illusion At any rate I will assume for the present until next year that it is no illusion My first act of free will shall be to believe in free will In 1884 James set the terms for all future discussions of determinism and compatibilism in the free will debates with his lecture to Harvard Divinity School students published as The Dilemma of Determinism 51 In this talk he defined the common terms hard determinism and soft determinism now more commonly called compatibilism 51 Old fashioned determinism was what we may call hard determinism It did not shrink from such words as fatality bondage of the will necessitation and the like Nowadays we have a soft determinism which abhors harsh words and repudiating fatality necessity and even predetermination says that its real name is freedom for freedom is only necessity understood and bondage to the highest is identical with true freedom 52 149 James called compatibilism a quagmire of evasion 52 149 just as the ideas of Thomas Hobbes and David Hume that free will was simply freedom from external coercion were called a wretched subterfuge by Immanuel Kant Indeterminism is the belief in freedom which holds that there is some degree of possibility that is not necessitated by the rest of reality 53 The word some in this definition is crucial in James s argument because it leaves room for a higher power as it does not require that all events be random Specifically indeterminism does not say that no events are guaranteed or connected to previous events instead it says that some events are not guaranteed some events are up to chance 48 In James s model of free will choice is deterministic determined by the person making it and it follows casually from one s character values and especially feelings and desires at the moment of decision 54 Chance on the other hand is indeterministic and pertains to possibilities that could happen but are not guaranteed 46 James described chance as neither hard nor soft determinism but indeterminism 52 153 The stronghold of the determinist argument is the antipathy to the idea of chance This notion of alternative possibility this admission that any one of several things may come to pass is after all only a roundabout name for chance James asked the students to consider his choice for walking home from Lowell Lecture Hall after his talk 52 155 What is meant by saying that my choice of which way to walk home after the lecture is ambiguous and matter of chance It means that both Divinity Avenue and Oxford Street are called but only one and that one either one shall be chosen With this simple example James laid out a two stage decision process with chance in a present time of random alternatives leading to a choice of one possibility that transforms an ambiguous future into a simple unalterable past James s two stage model separates chance undetermined alternative possibilities from choice the free action of the individual on which randomness has no effect Subsequent thinkers using this model include Henri Poincare Arthur Holly Compton and Karl Popper Philosophy of religion Edit Excerpt James did important work in philosophy of religion In his Gifford Lectures at the University of Edinburgh he provided a wide ranging account of The Varieties of Religious Experience 1902 and interpreted them according to his pragmatic leanings Some of the important claims he makes in this regard Religious genius experience should be the primary topic in the study of religion rather than religious institutions since institutions are merely the social descendant of genius The intense even pathological varieties of experience religious or otherwise should be sought by psychologists because they represent the closest thing to a microscope of the mind that is they show us in drastically enlarged form the normal processes of things In order to usefully interpret the realm of common shared experience and history we must each make certain over beliefs in things which while they cannot be proven on the basis of experience help us to live fuller and better lives A variety of characteristics can be seen within a single individual There are subconscious elements that compose the scattered fragments of a personality This is the reflection of a greater dissociation which is the separation between science and religion Religious Mysticism is only one half of mysticism the other half is composed of the insane and both of these are co located in the great subliminal or transmarginal region 55 James investigated mystical experiences throughout his life leading him to experiment with chloral hydrate 1870 amyl nitrite 1875 nitrous oxide 1882 and peyote 1896 citation needed James claimed that it was only when he was under the influence of nitrous oxide that he was able to understand Hegel 56 He concluded that while the revelations of the mystic hold true they hold true only for the mystic for others they are certainly ideas to be considered but can hold no claim to truth without personal experience of such American Philosophy An Encyclopedia classes him as one of several figures who took a more pantheist or pandeist approach by rejecting views of God as separate from the world 57 Mysticism EditWilliam James provided a description of the mystical experience in his famous collection of lectures published in 1902 as The Varieties of Religious Experience 58 These criteria are as follows Passivity a feeling of being grasped and held by a superior power not under your own control Ineffability no adequate way to use human language to describe the experience Noetic universal truths revealed that are unable to be acquired anywhere else Transient the mystical experience is only a temporary experience James s preference was to focus on human experience leading to his research of the subconscious This was the entryway for the awakening transformation of mystical states Mystical states represent the peak of religious experience This helped open James s inner process to self discovery Instincts EditSee also Instinct Like Sigmund Freud James was influenced by Charles Darwin s theory of natural selection 59 At the core of James s theory of psychology as defined in The Principles of Psychology 1890 was a system of instincts James wrote that humans had many instincts even more than other animals 59 These instincts he said could be overridden by experience and by each other as many of the instincts were actually in conflict with each other 59 In the 1920s however psychology turned away from evolutionary theory and embraced radical behaviorism 59 Theory of emotion EditJames is one of the two namesakes of the James Lange theory of emotion which he formulated independently of Carl Lange in the 1880s The theory holds that emotion is the mind s perception of physiological conditions that result from some stimulus In James s oft cited example it is not that we see a bear fear it and run we see a bear and run consequently we fear the bear Our mind s perception of the higher adrenaline level heartbeat etc is the emotion This way of thinking about emotion has great consequences for the philosophy of aesthetics as well as to the philosophy and practice of education 60 Here is a passage from his work The Principles of Psychology that spells out those consequences W e must immediately insist that aesthetic emotion pure and simple the pleasure given us by certain lines and masses and combinations of colors and sounds is an absolutely sensational experience an optical or auricular feeling that is primary and not due to the repercussion backwards of other sensations elsewhere consecutively aroused To this simple primary and immediate pleasure in certain pure sensations and harmonious combinations of them there may it is true be added secondary pleasures and in the practical enjoyment of works of art by the masses of mankind these secondary pleasures play a great part The more classic one s taste is however the less relatively important are the secondary pleasures felt to be in comparison with those of the primary sensation as it comes in Classicism and romanticism have their battles over this point The theory of emotion was also independently developed in Italy by the anthropologist Giuseppe Sergi 61 62 William James s bear Edit From Joseph LeDoux s description of William James s Emotion 63 Why do we run away if we notice that we are in danger Because we are afraid of what will happen if we don t This obvious answer to a seemingly trivial question has been the central concern of a century old debate about the nature of our emotions It all began in 1884 when William James published an article titled What Is an Emotion 64 The article appeared in a philosophy journal called Mind as there were no psychology journals yet It was important not because it definitively answered the question it raised but because of the way in which James phrased his response He conceived of an emotion in terms of a sequence of events that starts with the occurrence of an arousing stimulus the sympathetic nervous system or the parasympathetic nervous system and ends with a passionate feeling a conscious emotional experience A major goal of emotion research is still to elucidate this stimulus to feeling sequence to figure out what processes come between the stimulus and the feeling James set out to answer his question by asking another do we run from a bear because we are afraid or are we afraid because we run He proposed that the obvious answer that we run because we are afraid was wrong and instead argued that we are afraid because we run Our natural way of thinking about emotions is that the mental perception of some fact excites the mental affection called emotion and that this latter state of mind gives rise to the bodily expression My theory on the contrary is that the bodily changes follow directly the perception of the exciting fact and that our feeling of the same changes as they occur IS the emotion called feeling by Damasio The essence of James s proposal was simple It was premised on the fact that emotions are often accompanied by bodily responses racing heart tight stomach sweaty palms tense muscles and so on sympathetic nervous system and that we can sense what is going on inside our body much the same as we can sense what is going on in the outside world According to James emotions feel different from other states of mind because they have these bodily responses that give rise to internal sensations and different emotions feel different from one another because they are accompanied by different bodily responses and sensations For example when we see James s bear we run away During this act of escape the body goes through a physiological upheaval blood pressure rises heart rate increases pupils dilate palms sweat muscles contract in certain ways evolutionary innate defense mechanisms Other kinds of emotional situations will result in different bodily upheavals In each case the physiological responses return to the brain in the form of bodily sensations and the unique pattern of sensory feedback gives each emotion its unique quality Fear feels different from anger or love because it has a different physiological signature the parasympathetic nervous system for love The mental aspect of emotion the feeling is a slave to its physiology not vice versa we do not tremble because we are afraid or cry because we feel sad we are afraid because we tremble and are sad because we cry Philosophy of history EditOne of the long standing schisms in the philosophy of history concerns the role of individuals in social change One faction sees individuals as seen in Dickens A Tale of Two Cities and Thomas Carlyle s The French Revolution A History as the motive power of history and the broader society as the page on which they write their acts The other sees society as moving according to holistic principles or laws and sees individuals as its more or less willing pawns In 1880 James waded into this controversy with Great Men Great Thoughts and the Environment an essay published in the Atlantic Monthly He took Carlyle s side but without Carlyle s one sided emphasis on the political military sphere upon heroes as the founders or overthrowers of states and empires A philosopher according to James must accept geniuses as a given entity the same way as a biologist accepts as an entity Darwin s spontaneous variations The role of an individual will depend on the degree of its conformity with the social environment epoch moment etc 65 James introduces a notion of receptivities of the moment The societal mutations from generation to generation are determined directly or indirectly mainly by the acts or examples of individuals whose genius was so adapted to the receptivities of the moment or whose accidental position of authority was so critical that they became ferments initiators of movements setters of precedent or fashion centers of corruption or destroyers of other persons whose gifts had they had free play would have led society in another direction 66 View on spiritualism and associationism Edit James in a seance with a spiritualist medium James studied closely the schools of thought known as associationism and spiritualism The view of an associationist is that each experience that one has leads to another creating a chain of events The association does not tie together two ideas but rather physical objects 67 This association occurs on an atomic level Small physical changes occur in the brain which eventually form complex ideas or associations Thoughts are formed as these complex ideas work together and lead to new experiences Isaac Newton and David Hartley both were precursors to this school of thought proposing such ideas as physical vibrations in the brain spinal cord and nerves are the basis of all sensations all ideas and all motions 68 James disagreed with associationism in that he believed it to be too simple He referred to associationism as psychology without a soul 69 because there is nothing from within creating ideas they just arise by associating objects with one another On the other hand a spiritualist believes that mental events are attributed to the soul Whereas in associationism ideas and behaviors are separate in spiritualism they are connected Spiritualism encompasses the term innatism which suggests that ideas cause behavior Ideas of past behavior influence the way a person will act in the future these ideas are all tied together by the soul Therefore an inner soul causes one to have a thought which leads them to perform a behavior and memory of past behaviors determine how one will act in the future 69 James had a strong opinion about these schools of thought He was by nature a pragmatist and thus took the view that one should use whatever parts of theories make the most sense and can be proven 68 Therefore he recommended breaking apart spiritualism and associationism and using the parts of them that make the most sense James believed that each person has a soul which exists in a spiritual universe and leads a person to perform the behaviors they do in the physical world 68 James was influenced by Emanuel Swedenborg who first introduced him to this idea James stated that although it does appear that humans use associations to move from one event to the next this cannot be done without this soul tying everything together For after an association has been made it is the person who decides which part of it to focus on and therefore determines in which direction following associations will lead 67 Associationism is too simple in that it does not account for decision making of future behaviors and memory of what worked well and what did not Spiritualism however does not demonstrate actual physical representations for how associations occur James combined the views of spiritualism and associationism to create his own way of thinking James discussed tender minded thinkers as religious optimistic dogmatic and monistic Tough minded thinkers were irreligious pessimistic pluralists and skeptical Healthy minded individuals were seen as natural believers by having faith in God and universal order People who focused on human miseries and suffering were noted as sick souls James was a founding member and vice president of the American Society for Psychical Research 70 The lending of his name made Leonora Piper a famous medium In 1885 the year after the death of his young son James had his first sitting with Piper at the suggestion of his mother in law 71 He was soon convinced that Piper knew things she could only have discovered by supernatural means He expressed his belief in Piper by saying If you wish to upset the law that all crows are black it is enough if you prove that one crow is white My white crow is Mrs Piper 72 However James did not believe that Piper was in contact with spirits After evaluating sixty nine reports of Piper s mediumship he considered the hypothesis of telepathy as well as Piper obtaining information about her sitters by natural means such as her memory recalling information According to James the spirit control hypothesis of her mediumship was incoherent irrelevant and in cases demonstrably false 73 James held seances with Piper and was impressed by some of the details he was given however according to Massimo Polidoro a maid in the household of James was friendly with a maid in Piper s house and this may have been a source of information that Piper used for private details about James 74 Bibliographers Frederick Burkhardt and Fredson Bowers who compiled the works of James wrote It is thus possible that Mrs Piper s knowledge of the James family was acquired from the gossip of servants and that the whole mystery rests on the failure of the people upstairs to realize that servants downstairs also have ears 75 James was convinced that the future will corroborate the existence of telepathy 76 Psychologists such as James McKeen Cattell and Edward B Titchener took issue with James s support for psychical research and considered his statements unscientific 77 78 Cattell in a letter to James wrote that the Society for Psychical Research is doing much to injure psychology 79 James s theory of the self EditJames s theory of the self divided a person s mental picture of self into two categories the Me and the I The Me can be thought of as a separate object or individual a person refers to when describing their personal experiences while the I is the self that knows who they are and what they have done in their life 38 Both concepts are depicted in the statement I know it was me who ate the cookie He called the Me part of self the empirical me and the I part the pure Ego 80 For James the I part of self was the thinking self which could not be further divided He linked this part of the self to the soul of a person or what is now thought of as the mind 81 Educational theorists have been inspired in various ways by James s theory of self and have developed various applications to curricular and pedagogical theory and practice 60 James further divided the Me part of self into a material a social and a spiritual self as below 80 Material self Edit The material self consists of things that belong to a person or entities that a person belongs to Thus things like the body family clothes money and such make up the material self For James the core of the material self was the body 81 Second to the body James felt a person s clothes were important to the material self He believed a person s clothes were one way they expressed who they felt they were or clothes were a way to show status thus contributing to forming and maintaining one s self image 81 Money and family are critical parts of the material self James felt that if one lost a family member a part of who they are was lost also Money figured in one s material self in a similar way If a person had significant money then lost it who they were as a person changed as well 81 Social self Edit Our social selves are who we are in a given social situation For James people change how they act depending on the social situation that they are in James believed that people had as many social selves as they did social situations they participated in 81 For example a person may act in a different way at work when compared to how that same person may act when they are out with a group of friends James also believed that in a given social group an individual s social self may be divided even further 81 An example of this would be in the social context of an individual s work environment the difference in behavior when that individual is interacting with their boss versus their behavior when interacting with a co worker Spiritual self Edit For James the spiritual self was who we are at our core It is more concrete or permanent than the other two selves The spiritual self is our subjective and most intimate self Aspects of a spiritual self include things like personality core values and conscience that do not typically change throughout an individual s lifetime The spiritual self involves introspection or looking inward to deeper spiritual moral or intellectual questions without the influence of objective thoughts 81 For James achieving a high level of understanding of who we are at our core or understanding our spiritual selves is more rewarding than satisfying the needs of the social and material selves Pure ego Edit What James refers to as the I self For James the pure ego is what provides the thread of continuity between our past present and future selves The pure ego s perception of consistent individual identity arises from a continuous stream of consciousness 82 James believed that the pure ego was similar to what we think of as the soul or the mind The pure ego was not a substance and therefore could not be examined by science 38 Notable works EditThe Principles of Psychology 2 vols 1890 Dover Publications 1950 vol 1 ISBN 0 486 20381 6 vol 2 ISBN 0 486 20382 4 Psychology Briefer Course 1892 University of Notre Dame Press 1985 ISBN 0 268 01557 0 Dover Publications 2001 ISBN 0 486 41604 6 Is Life Worth Living 1895 the seminal lecture delivered at Harvard on April 15 1895 The Will to Believe and Other Essays in Popular Philosophy 1897 Human Immortality Two Supposed Objections to the Doctrine the Ingersoll Lecture 1897 The Will to Believe Human Immortality 1956 Dover Publications ISBN 0 486 20291 7 Talks to Teachers on Psychology and to Students on Some of Life s Ideals 1899 Dover Publications 2001 ISBN 0 486 41964 9 IndyPublish com 2005 ISBN 1 4219 5806 6 The Varieties of Religious Experience A Study in Human Nature 1902 ISBN 0 14 039034 0 Pragmatism A New Name for Some Old Ways of Thinking 1907 Hackett Publishing 1981 ISBN 0 915145 05 7 Dover 1995 ISBN 0 486 28270 8 A Pluralistic Universe 1909 Hibbert Lectures University of Nebraska Press 1996 ISBN 0 8032 7591 9 The Meaning of Truth A Sequel to Pragmatism 1909 Prometheus Books 1997 ISBN 1 57392 138 6 Some Problems of Philosophy A Beginning of an Introduction to Philosophy 1911 University of Nebraska Press 1996 ISBN 0 8032 7587 0 Memories and Studies 1911 Reprint Services Corp 1992 ISBN 0 7812 3481 6 Essays in Radical Empiricism 1912 Dover Publications 2003 ISBN 0 486 43094 4 critical edition Frederick Burkhardt and Fredson Bowers editors Harvard University Press 1976 ISBN 0 674 26717 6 includes commentary notes enumerated emendations appendices with English translation of La Notion de Conscience Letters of William James 2 vols 1920 Collected Essays and Reviews 1920 Ralph Barton Perry The Thought and Character of William James 2 vols 1935 Vanderbilt University Press 1996 reprint ISBN 0 8265 1279 8 contains some 500 letters by William James not found in the earlier edition of the Letters of William James William James on Psychical Research 1960 The Correspondence of William James 12 vols 1992 2004 University of Virginia Press ISBN 0 8139 2318 2 The Dilemma of Determinism William James on Habit Will Truth and the Meaning of Life James Sloan Allen ed Frederic C Beil Publisher ISBN 978 1 929490 45 5Collections Edit William James Writings 1878 1899 1992 Library of America 1212 p ISBN 978 0 940450 72 1Psychology Briefer Course rev and condensed Principles of Psychology The Will to Believe and Other Essays in Popular Philosophy Talks to Teachers and Students Essays nine others dd William James Writings 1902 1910 1987 Library of America 1379 p ISBN 978 0 940450 38 7The Varieties of Religious Experience Pragmatism A Pluralistic Universe The Meaning of Truth Some Problems of Philosophy Essays dd The Writings of William James A Comprehensive Edition 1978 University of Chicago Press 912 pp ISBN 0 226 39188 4Pragmatism Essays in Radical Empiricism and A Pluralistic Universe complete plus selections from other works dd In 1975 Harvard University Press began publication of a standard edition of The Works of William James See also Edit Biography portal Philosophy portal Psychology portal The Moral Philosopher and the Moral Life Psychology of religion American philosophy List of American philosophers William James Lectures William James SocietyNotes Edit See his Defense of a Pragmatic Notion of Truth written to counter criticisms of his Pragmatism s Conception of Truth 1907 lecture References EditCitations Edit Krey Peter 2004 The Ethics of Belief William Clifford versus William p 1 Bill James of Harvard was among the first foreigners to take cognizance of Thought and Reality already in 1873 Lettres inedites de African Spir au professeur Penjon Unpublished Letters of African Spir to professor Penjon Neuchatel 1948 p 231 n 7 Hoffman Michael J Gertrude Stein in the Psychology Laboratory American Quarterly vol 17 no 1 1965 pp 127 132 JSTOR www jstor org stable 2711342 Accessed 2 Mar 2020 T L Brink 2008 Psychology A Student Friendly Approach Unit One The Definition and History of Psychology p 10 William James Writings 1878 1899 The Library of America June 1 1992 Retrieved September 21 2013 William James Writings 1902 1910 The Library of America February 1 1987 Retrieved September 21 2013 Dr Megan E Bradley William James PSYography Faculty frostburg edu Archived from the original on November 24 2014 Retrieved September 21 2013 Haggbloom Steven J Warnick Renee Warnick Jason E Jones Vinessa K et al 2002 The 100 most eminent psychologists of the 20th century Review of General Psychology 6 2 139 152 doi 10 1037 1089 2680 6 2 139 S2CID 145668721 J H Korn R Davis S F Davis Historians and chairpersons judgements of eminence among psychologists American Psychologist 1991 Volume 46 pp 789 792 Wilhelm Maximilian Wundt in Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Tom Butler Bowdon 50 Psychology Classics Nicholas Brealey Publishing 2007 ISBN 1857884736 p 2 a b William James Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Center for the Study of Language and Information CSLI Stanford University Retrieved September 21 2013 James William 2009 The Varieties of Religious Experience The Library of America pp 74 120 ISBN 978 1 59853 062 9 Sacks Oliver 2008 Musicophilia Tales of Music and the Brain Revised and Expanded Edition New York Vintage Books pp xiii ISBN 978 1 4000 3353 9 Antony Lysy William James Theosophist The Quest Volume 88 number 6 November December 2000 Ralph Barton Perry The Thought and Character of William James vol 1 1935 1996 edition ISBN 0 8265 1279 8 p 228 Cultural Resource Information System CRIS New York State Office of Parks Recreation and Historic Preservation Archived from the original Searchable database on July 1 2015 Retrieved February 1 2016 Note This includes Rachel D Carley January 2012 National Register of Historic Places Registration Form Putnam Camp PDF Retrieved February 1 2016 and Accompanying photographs Duane P Schultz Sydney Ellen Schultz March 22 2007 A History of Modern Psychology Cengage Learning pp 185 ISBN 978 0 495 09799 0 Schmidt Barbara A History of and Guide to Uniform Editions of Mark Twain s Works twainquotes com Retrieved October 1 2014 Thorndike Edward 1910 Communications and discussions William James Journal of Educational Psychology 1 8 473 474 doi 10 1037 h0075718 Capps Donald October 23 2015 The Religious Life The Insights of William James Wipf and Stock Publishers ISBN 978 1 4982 1994 5 via Google Books Sommer Andreas April 1 2012 Psychical research and the origins of American psychology Hist Hum Sci 25 2 23 44 doi 10 1177 0952695112439376 PMC 3552602 PMID 23355763 Haggbloom S J et al 2002 The 100 Most Eminent Psychologists of the 20th Century Review of General Psychology 6 2 139 152 doi 10 1037 1089 2680 6 2 139 S2CID 145668721 Archived from the original on April 29 2006 Haggbloom et al combined 3 quantitative variables citations in professional journals citations in textbooks and nominations in a survey given to members of the Association for Psychological Science with 3 qualitative variables converted to quantitative scores National Academy of Sciences NAS membership American Psychological Association APA President or recipient of the APA Distinguished Scientific Contributions Award and surname used as an eponym Then the list was rank ordered Kelly Howard A Burrage Walter L eds James William American Medical Biographies Baltimore The Norman Remington Company John J McDermott The Writings of William James A Comprehensive Edition University of Chicago Press 1977 revised edition ISBN 0 226 39188 4 pp 812 58 William James The Moral Equivalent of War Introduction by John Roland Archived December 16 2019 at the Wayback Machine Constitution org Retrieved on 2011 08 28 William James The Moral Equivalent of War 1906 Archived May 26 2020 at the Wayback Machine Constitution org Retrieved on 2011 08 28 Harrison Ross Steeves Frank Humphrey Ristine 1913 Representative essays in modern thought a basis for composition American Book Company pp 519 Retrieved August 28 2011 via Internet Archive James William August 1910 The Moral Equivalent of War McClure s Magazine 463 468 a b James William 1907 Pragmatism s Conception of Truth lecture 6 Pp 76 91 in Pragmatism A New Name for Some Old Ways of Thinking New York Longman Green and Co Archived from the original July 15 2006 Pragmatic Theory of Truth Pp 427 28 in Encyclopedia of Philosophy 6 London Macmillan 1969 a b William James 1907 1906 What Pragmatism Means lecture 2 Pp 17 32 in Pragmatism A New Name for Some Old Ways of Thinking New York Longman Green and Co via The Mead Project Brock University 2007 Available via Marxist Internet Archive 2005 H O Mounce 1997 The two pragmatisms from Peirce to Rorty Psychology Press ISBN 978 0 415 15283 9 James William 1909 The Meaning of Truth New York Longmans Green amp Co p 177 a b Gunn Giles 2000 William James Pragmatism and Other Writings Penguin Group pp 24 40 Burch Robert June 22 2001 Charles Sanders Peirce Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Archived from the original on January 7 2020 Retrieved December 9 2019 Gunn Giles 2000 William James Pragmatism and Other Writings Penguin Group pp 119 132 a b c d e Pomerleau Wayne William James 1842 1910 Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy IEP Retrieved April 28 2018 James William 1897 1882 The Sentiment of Rationality The Will to Believe and Other Essays in Popular Philosophy New York Longmans Green amp Co a b James William 2000 1842 1910 Pragmatism and other writings Penguin Books ISBN 0 14 043735 5 OCLC 943305535 a b Legg Catherine March 14 2019 Pragmatism Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Retrieved November 12 2019 Atkin Albert Charles Sanders Peirce Pragmatism Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy Archived from the original on July 10 2019 Retrieved December 8 2019 Peirce Charles S 1878 How to Make Our Ideas Clear Popular Science Monthly excerpt Pp 212 218 in An Anthology of Nineteenth Century American Science Writing edited by C R Resetarits Anthem Press 2012 ISBN 978 0 85728 651 2 doi 10 7135 upo9780857286512 037 James William May 1 2002 Pragmatism The Project Gutenberg EBook of Pragmatism Retrieved November 12 2019 a b Doyle Bob 2011 Free Will the Scandal in Philosophy I Phi Press The Information Philosopher a b James William 2009 1887 The Will to Believe The Will to Believe and Other Essays in Popular Philosophy New York Longmans Green amp Co at Project Gutenberg produced by A Haines a b James William 2018 1918 The Principles of Psychology vol 2 New York Henry Holt and Company at Project Gutenberg produced by C Graham and M D Hooghe a b Viney Donald Wayne 1986 William James on Free Will and Determinism The Journal of Mind and Behavior 7 4 555 565 JSTOR 43853234 a b Shouler Kenneth A 2008 The Everything Guide to Understanding Philosophy the Basic Concepts of the Greatest Thinkers of All Time Made Easy Adams Media Perry Ralph Barton The Thought and Character of William James 1 p 323 Letters of William James 1 p 147 a b James William 2009 c 1884 The Dilemma of Determinism The Will to Believe and Other Essays in Popular Philosophy New York Longmans Green amp Co at Project Gutenberg produced by A Haines a b c d James William 1956 1884 The Dilemma of Determinism In The Will to Believe and Other Essays in Popular Philosophy New York Dover Pomerleau Wayne P William James 1842 1910 Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy William James Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy Article Doyle BOB 2010 Jamesian Free Will the Two Stage Model of William James William James Studies 5 1 28 JSTOR 26203733 James William 1985 The Varieties of Religious Experience New York Penguin Classics p 426 William James Subjective Effects of Nitrous Oxide John Lachs and Robert Talisse 2007 American Philosophy An Encyclopedia p 310 ISBN 978 0 415 93926 3 via Internet Archive Mysticism Defined by William James www bodysoulandspirit net dead link a b c d Buss David M 2008 Chapter 1 Pp 2 35 in Evolutionary psychology the new science of the mind Pearson a b Ergas Oren 2017 Reconstructing education through mindful attention London Palgrave Macmillan ISBN 978 1 137 58781 7 Sergi Giuseppe 1858 L origine dei fenomeni psichici e loro significazione biologica Milano Fratelli Dumolard ISBN 1271529408 Sergi Giuseppe 1894 Storia Naturale dei Sentimenti Principi di Psicologie Dolore e Piacere Milano Fratelli Dumolard ISBN 1147667462 LeDoux Joseph E 1996 The Emotional Brain the Mysterious Underpinnings of Emotional Life ISBN 0 684 83659 9 p 43 James William 1884 What is an Emotion Mind 9 188 205 Grinin L E 2010 The Role of an Individual in History A Reconsideration Social Evolution amp History 9 2 95 136 p 103 William James 2007 1880 Great Men Great Thoughts and the Environment Atlantic Monthly 46 441 59 a b James William 1985 1892 Psychology Briefer Course University of Notre Dame Press ISBN 0 268 01557 0 a b c Richardson Robert D 2006 William James In the Maelstrom of American Modernism Houghton Mifflin ISBN 0 618 43325 2 a b James William 1890 The Principles of Psychology Eugene Taylor 2009 The Mystery of Personality A History of Psychodynamic Theories Springer p 30 ISBN 978 0387981031 Deborah Blum 2007 Ghost Hunters William James and the Search for Scientific Proof of Life Penguin Group p 98 ISBN 978 0 14 303895 5 Gardner Murphy Robert O Ballou 1960 William James on Psychical Research Viking Press p 41 Francesca Bordogna 2008 William James at the Boundaries Philosophy Science and the Geography of Knowledge University Of Chicago Press p 127 ISBN 978 0226066523 Massimo Polidoro 2001 Final Seance The Strange Friendship Between Houdini and Conan Doyle Prometheus Books p 36 ISBN 978 1573928960 Frederick Burkhardt and Fredson Bowers 1986 Essays in Psychical Research Harvard University Press p 397 in William James The Works of William James Edited by Frederick H Burkhardt Fredson Bowers and Ignas K Skrupskelis 19 vols Cambridge MA and London Harvard University Press 1975 1988 About the Shadow World Everybody s Magazine v 20 1909 Lamont Peter 2013 Extraordinary Beliefs A Historical Approach to a Psychological Problem Cambridge University Press pp 184 188 Kimble Gregory A Wertheimer Michael White Charlotte 2013 Portraits of Pioneers in Psychology Psychology Press p 23 ISBN 0 8058 0620 2 Goodwin C James 2015 A History of Modern Psychology Wiley p 154 ISBN 978 1 118 83375 9 a b Cooper W E 1992 William James s theory of the self Monist 75 4 504 a b c d e f g Classics in the History of Psychology archived copy Archived from the original on December 6 2013 Retrieved December 3 2013 Introduction to William James www uky edu July 31 2013 Sources Edit Essays Philosophical and Psychological in Honor of William James by his Colleagues at Columbia University London 1908 Further reading EditJames Sloan Allen ed William James on Habit Will Truth and the Meaning of Life 2014 Frederic C Beil Publisher ISBN 978 1 929490 45 5 Margo Bistis Remnant of the Future William James Automated Utopia in Norman M Klein and Margo Bistis The Imaginary 20th Century Karlsruhe ZKM 2016 Emile Boutroux William James New York 1912 Werner Bloch Der Pragmatismus von James und Schiller nebst Exkursen uber Weltanschauung und uber die Hypothese Leipzig 1913 K A Busch William James als Religionsphilosoph Gottingen 1911 Jacques Barzun A Stroll with William James 1983 Harper and Row ISBN 0 226 03869 6 Deborah Blum Ghost Hunters William James and the Search for Scientific Proof of Life After Death 2006 Penguin Press ISBN 1 59420 090 4 Wesley Cooper The Unity of William James s Thought 2002 Vanderbilt University Press ISBN 0 8265 1387 5 Howard M Feinstein Becoming William James 1984 Cornell University Press ISBN 978 0 8014 8642 5 Theodore Flournoy La Philosophie de William James Saint Blaise 1911 Sergio Franzese The Ethics of Energy William James s Moral Philosophy in Focus Ontos Verlag 2008 Sergio Franzese amp Felicitas Kramer eds Fringes of Religious Experience Cross perspectives on William James s Varieties of Religious Experience Frankfurt Lancaster ontos verlag Process Thought XII 2007 Peter Hare Michel Weber James K Swindler Oana Maria Pastae Cerasel Cuteanu eds International Perspectives on Pragmatism Newcastle upon Tyne Cambridge Scholars Publishing 2009 James Huneker A Philosophy for Philistines in his The Pathos of Distance New York 1913 Henry James A Small Boy and Others 1913 and Notes of a Son and Brother 1914 Amy Kittelstrom The Religion of Democracy Seven Liberals and the American Moral Tradition New York Penguin 2015 H V Knox Philosophy of William James London 1914 R W B Lewis The Jameses A Family Narrative 1991 Farrar Straus amp Giroux Louis Menand The Metaphysical Club A Story of Ideas in America 2001 Farrar Straus and Giroux ISBN 0 374 52849 7 Menard Analyse et critique des principes de la psychologie de W James Paris 1911 analyzes the lives and relationship between James Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr Charles Sanders Peirce and John Dewey Gerald E Myers William James His Life and Thought 1986 Yale University Press 2001 paperback ISBN 0 300 08917 1 Focuses on his psychology includes 230 pages of notes Giuseppe Sergi L origine dei fenomeni psichici e loro significazione biologica Milano Fratelli Dumolard 1885 Giuseppe Sergi Principi di Psicologie Dolore e Piacere Storia Naturale dei Sentimenti Milano Fratelli Dumolard 1894 James Pawelski The Dynamic Individualism of William James 2007 SUNY press ISBN 0 7914 7239 6 R B Perry Present Philosophical Tendencies New York 1912 Robert D Richardson William James In the Maelstrom of American Modernism 2006 Houghton Mifflin ISBN 0 618 43325 2 Robert D Richardson ed The Heart of William James 2010 Harvard U Press ISBN 978 0 674 05561 2 Jane Roberts The Afterdeath Journal of an American Philosopher The View of William James 1978 Prentice Hall ISBN 0 13 018515 9 Barbara Ross chapter William James A Prime Mover of the Psychoanalytic Movement in America in Psychoanalysis Psychotherapy and the New England Medical Scene 1894 1944 Science History Publications New York 1978 ISBN 9780882021690 Josiah Royce William James and Other Essays on the Philosophy of Life New York 1911 J Michael Tilley William James Living Forward and the Development of Radical Empiricism In Kierkegaard s Influence on Philosophy Anglophone Philosophy edited by Jon Stewart 2012 Ashgate Publishing 87 98 Linda Simon Genuine Reality A Life of William James 1998 Harcourt Brace amp Company ISBN 0 226 75859 1 Michel Weber Whitehead s Pancreativism Jamesian Applications Ontos Verlag 2011 ISBN 978 386838 103 0 Michel Weber On Religiousness and Religion Huxley s Reading of Whitehead s Religion in the Making in the Light of James Varieties of Religious Experience Jerome Meckier and Bernfried Nugel eds Aldous Huxley Annual A Journal of Twentieth Century Thought and Beyond Volume 5 Munster LIT Verlag March 2005 pp 117 32 Michel Weber James s Mystical Body in the Light of the Transmarginal Field of Consciousness in Sergio Franzese amp Felicitas Kramer eds Fringes of Religious Experience Cross perspectives on William James s Varieties of Religious Experience Frankfurt Lancaster Ontos Verlag Process Thought XII 2007 pp 7 37 Wiseman R 2012 Rip it up The radically new approach to changing your life London UK MacmillanExternal links EditWilliam James at Wikipedia s sister projects Media from Commons Quotations from Wikiquote Texts from Wikisource Data from Wikidata William James Society Emory University William James major collection of essays and works online William James correspondence from the Historic Psychiatry Collection Menninger Archives Kansas Historical Society Harvard University Life is in the Transitions William James 1842 1910 online exhibition from Houghton Library Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy William James William James on Information Philosopher Booknotes interview with Linda Simon on Genuine Reality A Life of William James June 7 1998 William James Looking for a Way Out New York Times obituary Works by William James at Project Gutenberg Works by or about William James at Internet Archive Works by William James at LibriVox public domain audiobooks William James at Find a Grave Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title William James amp oldid 1131366530, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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