Notes on ContributorsIntroductionI The Future of Philosophical Research1. Dewey’s Conception of PhilosophyII Metaphysics2. Dewey’s Naturalistic Metaphysics3. Dewey, Whitehead, and Process MetaphysicsIII Epistemology, Science, Language, and Mind4. Pragmatist Portraits of Experimental Intelligence by Peirce, James, Dewey, and Others5. Dewey, Rorty, and Brandom: The Challenges of Linguistic Neopragmatism6. Pragmatist Innovations, Actual and Proposed: Dewey, Peirce, and the Pittsburgh School7. Dewey and Anti-RepresentationalismIV Ethics, Law, and the Starting Point8. Dewey’s Radical Conception of Moral Cognition9. Dewey on the Authority and Legitimacy of Law10. Beyond Moral Fundamentalism: Dewey’s Pragmatic Pluralism in Ethics and Politics11. The Starting Point of Dewey’s Ethics and Sociopolitical PhilosophyV Social and Political Philosophy, Race, and Feminist Philosophy12. Dewey and Du Bois on Race and Colonialism13. Dewey and Pragmatist Feminist Philosophy14. Dewey’s Pragmatic Politics: Power, Limits, and Realism About Democracy as a Way of Life15. Dewey, Addams, and Design Thinking: Pragmatist Feminist Innovation for Democratic ChangeVI Philosophy of Education16. Dewey and the Quest for Certainty in Education17. Derridean Poststructuralism, Deweyan Pragmatism, and Education18. Dewey, the Ethics of Democracy, and the Challenge of Social Inclusion in Education19. Dewey and Higher Education20. Dewey, Aesthetic Experience, and Education for HumanityVII Aesthetics21. Dewey’s Art as Experience in the Landscape of Twenty-First-Century Aesthetics22. Dewey, Adorno, and the Purpose of ArtVIII Instrumental Logic, Philosophy of Technology, and the Unfinished Project of Modernity23. Dewey, Pragmatism, Technology24. Dewey’s Chicago-Functionalist Conception of Logic25. Dewey, Habermas, and the Unfinished Project of Modernity in Unmodern Philosophy and Modern PhilosophyIX Dewey in Cross-Cultural Dialogue26. Dewey and Confucian Philosophy27. Two-Way Internationalization: Education, Translation, and Transformation in Dewey and Cavell28. Experimental Democracy for China: Dewey’s MethodX The American Philosophical Tradition, the Social Sciences, and Religion29. John Dewey’s Debt to William James30. Mead, Dewey, and Their Influence in the Social Sciences31. Idealism and Religion in Dewey’s Philosophy32. Philosophy and the Mirror of Culture: On the Future and Function of Dewey ScholarshipXI Public Philosophy and Practical Ethics33. Dewey and Public Philosophy34. Dewey and Environmental Philosophy35. Dewey and BioethicsIndex