
Point of Inquiry Paul Kurtz - John Dewey and the Real Point of Inquiry
Mar 26, 2010
Paul Kurtz, philosopher and founder of the Center for Inquiry, brings decades of scientific skepticism and humanism to a discussion of John Dewey. He outlines pragmatism, active inquiry as a way of thinking, Dewey's progressive education and faith in democracy, and how inquiry counters superstition and supports moral reappraisal.
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Pragmatism Defines Ideas As Practical Tools
- Pragmatism tests ideas by their consequences and treats ideas as tools for improving life.
- Paul Kurtz explains Dewey as an instrumentalist who views ideas as instruments to understand nature and solve practical problems.
Inquiry Begins With Doubt And Solves Problems
- Inquiry is a process that grows from doubt and conflict and is the human method for solving problems.
- Kurtz highlights Dewey's view that thinking emerges from facing problems and that cognition is an adaptive, Darwin-influenced method.
Humanism Makes Science Serve Human Flourishing
- Dewey's humanism makes science and nature servants of the human good rather than separate transcendent realms.
- Kurtz notes Dewey rejected mind-body dualism and saw thinking as bio-social, aimed at expanding human experience.







