American Philosophies
An Anthology
Blackwell Philosophy Anthologies (Band Nr. 16)
This anthology promotes a new vision: American Philosophy as complex and constantly changing, enlivened by historically marginalized, yet never silent, voices.
Acknowledgments.
Introduction.
Prolegomenon to a Tradition: What is American Philosophy
(Leonard Harris).
Part I: Origin and Teleology.
1. Letter to the Taino/Arawak Indians, 1493 (King Ferdinand of
Aragon).
2. Speeches (Sa-Go-Ye-Wat-Ha).
3. How the World Began (Arthur C. Parker).
4. The Interesting Narrative (Olaudah Equian).
5. A History of New York (Washington Irving).
6. Nature (Ralph Waldo Emerson).
Part II: Minds and Selves.
7. Impressions of an Indian Childhood (Zit Kala Sa).
8. Of Being and Original Sin (Jonathan Edwards).
9. Principles of Psychology (William James).
10. Self-Consciousness, Social Consciousness and Nature (Josiah
Royce).
11. Our Brains and What Ails Them (Charlotte Perkins
Gilman).
12. Race (W. E. B. Du Bois).
13. The Genesis of the Self and Social Control (George Herbert
Mead).
Part III: Knowledge and Inquiry.
14. Knowledge (Frances Wright).
15. An Introduction to the Study of Phylosophy Wrote in America
for the Use of a Young Gentleman (Cadwallader Colden).
16. What Pragmatism Is (Charles Sanders Peirce).
17. The Supremacy of Method (John Dewey).
18. The Practice of Philosophy (Susanne K. Langer).
19. An American Urphilosophie (Robert Bunge).
Part IV: Community and Power.
20. Traditional History of the Confederacy of the Six Nations
(Committee of the Chiefs).
21. Account of My Life (Benjamin Franklin).
22. The Federalist Papers (Alexander Hamilton, James Madison,
John Jay).
23. Observations on the New Constitution (Mercy Otis
Warren).
Part V: Slavery and Freedom.
24. The Pueblo Revolt, 1680 (Don Antonio de Otermin).
25. Fourth of July Address at Reidsville, New York, 1854 (John
Wannuaucon Quinney).
26. Appeal to the Colored Citizens of the World, 1829 (David
Walker).
27. Prejudice Against People of Color, and Our Duties in
Relation to this Subject (Lydia Maria Child).
28. Civil Disobedience (Henry David Thoreau).
29. Oration, Delivered in Corinthian Hall, Rochester, July 5,
1852 (Frederick Douglass).
30. Women versus the Indian (Anna J. Cooper).
Part VI: Democracy and Utopia.
31. Male Continence (John Humphrey Noyes).
32. Democratic Vistas (Walt Whitman).
33. Newer Ideals of Peace (Jane Addams).
34. Anarchism: What It Really Stands For (Emma Goldman).
35. What to Do and How to Do It (George Washington Woodbey).
36. What the Indian Means to America (Luther Standing Bear).
37. Our Democracy and the American Indian (Laura M. C.
Kellogg).
38. Cultural Pluralism (Alain L. Locke).
Index.
Introduction.
Prolegomenon to a Tradition: What is American Philosophy
(Leonard Harris).
Part I: Origin and Teleology.
1. Letter to the Taino/Arawak Indians, 1493 (King Ferdinand of
Aragon).
2. Speeches (Sa-Go-Ye-Wat-Ha).
3. How the World Began (Arthur C. Parker).
4. The Interesting Narrative (Olaudah Equian).
5. A History of New York (Washington Irving).
6. Nature (Ralph Waldo Emerson).
Part II: Minds and Selves.
7. Impressions of an Indian Childhood (Zit Kala Sa).
8. Of Being and Original Sin (Jonathan Edwards).
9. Principles of Psychology (William James).
10. Self-Consciousness, Social Consciousness and Nature (Josiah
Royce).
11. Our Brains and What Ails Them (Charlotte Perkins
Gilman).
12. Race (W. E. B. Du Bois).
13. The Genesis of the Self and Social Control (George Herbert
Mead).
Part III: Knowledge and Inquiry.
14. Knowledge (Frances Wright).
15. An Introduction to the Study of Phylosophy Wrote in America
for the Use of a Young Gentleman (Cadwallader Colden).
16. What Pragmatism Is (Charles Sanders Peirce).
17. The Supremacy of Method (John Dewey).
18. The Practice of Philosophy (Susanne K. Langer).
19. An American Urphilosophie (Robert Bunge).
Part IV: Community and Power.
20. Traditional History of the Confederacy of the Six Nations
(Committee of the Chiefs).
21. Account of My Life (Benjamin Franklin).
22. The Federalist Papers (Alexander Hamilton, James Madison,
John Jay).
23. Observations on the New Constitution (Mercy Otis
Warren).
Part V: Slavery and Freedom.
24. The Pueblo Revolt, 1680 (Don Antonio de Otermin).
25. Fourth of July Address at Reidsville, New York, 1854 (John
Wannuaucon Quinney).
26. Appeal to the Colored Citizens of the World, 1829 (David
Walker).
27. Prejudice Against People of Color, and Our Duties in
Relation to this Subject (Lydia Maria Child).
28. Civil Disobedience (Henry David Thoreau).
29. Oration, Delivered in Corinthian Hall, Rochester, July 5,
1852 (Frederick Douglass).
30. Women versus the Indian (Anna J. Cooper).
Part VI: Democracy and Utopia.
31. Male Continence (John Humphrey Noyes).
32. Democratic Vistas (Walt Whitman).
33. Newer Ideals of Peace (Jane Addams).
34. Anarchism: What It Really Stands For (Emma Goldman).
35. What to Do and How to Do It (George Washington Woodbey).
36. What the Indian Means to America (Luther Standing Bear).
37. Our Democracy and the American Indian (Laura M. C.
Kellogg).
38. Cultural Pluralism (Alain L. Locke).
Index.
"Leonard Harris, Scott L. Pratt, and Anne S. Waters have produced
an anthology nurtured by a profound epistemological and cultural
value pluralism. The text unapologetically reveals a diversity of
philosophical perspectives and traditions previously marginalized
by intellectual and political normative forces that have valorized
a few white men as the 'oracle voices' of American
philosophy. This new, relevant, and highly engaging anthology will
force academic and cultural gatekeepers to radically reassess what
it means 'to know and to be,' 'to do American
philosophy,' 'to be an American,' and
'to live democratically." George Yancy, Duquesne University
and editor of Cornel West: A Critical Reader (Blackwell
2001)
an anthology nurtured by a profound epistemological and cultural
value pluralism. The text unapologetically reveals a diversity of
philosophical perspectives and traditions previously marginalized
by intellectual and political normative forces that have valorized
a few white men as the 'oracle voices' of American
philosophy. This new, relevant, and highly engaging anthology will
force academic and cultural gatekeepers to radically reassess what
it means 'to know and to be,' 'to do American
philosophy,' 'to be an American,' and
'to live democratically." George Yancy, Duquesne University
and editor of Cornel West: A Critical Reader (Blackwell
2001)
Leonard Harris is Professor of Philosophy Professor at Purdue University. of Philosophy, He is editor of Racism (1999), The Critical Pragmatism of Alain Locke, (1999) and co-editor of Exploitation and Exclusion: Race and Class in Contemporary US Society (1992).
Scott Pratt is Assistant Professor at the University of Oregon. He is co-editor of The Philosophy of Cadwallader Colden (forthcoming).
Anne Waters is Assistant Professor at Texas Woman's University. She is the editor of American Indian Thought: A Philosophical Reader (Blackwell, forthcoming). She is also co-editor of Hypatia, Journal of Feminist Philosophy and is on the editorial board of Ayaanwayaamizin: An International Indigenist Philosophy Journal, and the Radical Philosophy Review.
Scott Pratt is Assistant Professor at the University of Oregon. He is co-editor of The Philosophy of Cadwallader Colden (forthcoming).
Anne Waters is Assistant Professor at Texas Woman's University. She is the editor of American Indian Thought: A Philosophical Reader (Blackwell, forthcoming). She is also co-editor of Hypatia, Journal of Feminist Philosophy and is on the editorial board of Ayaanwayaamizin: An International Indigenist Philosophy Journal, and the Radical Philosophy Review.