William James brought heart to the intellect and passion to the world of ideas in an unprecedented manner in American life. He is the most profound, adorable, and unpretentious public intellectual in American history. -- Cornel West, Princeton University A gift from the best biographer of William James, this volume collects some of James's most engaging and unforgettable writings. Readers unfamiliar with James will discover why his ideas continue to reverberate so powerfully a century after his death; those who already know James will delight in Robert Richardson's expert selections and incisive commentary. At a time when self-proclaimed followers of James's philosophy inhabit schools of medicine and law as well as divinity, and his ideas inspire those working in sites ranging from psychology laboratories and corporate board rooms to the White House, this sparkling collection reminds us why James remains alive today. -- James T. Kloppenberg, Harvard University
Robert Richardson is an independent scholar who has taught at the University of Denver, Harvard University, and several other schools.
William James brought heart to the intellect and passion to the
world of ideas in an unprecedented manner in American life. He is
the most profound, adorable, and unpretentious public intellectual
in American history.
*Cornel West, Princeton University*
A gift from the best biographer of William James, this volume
collects some of James's most engaging and unforgettable writings.
Readers unfamiliar with James will discover why his ideas continue
to reverberate so powerfully a century after his death; those who
already know James will delight in Robert Richardson's expert
selections and incisive commentary. At a time when self-proclaimed
followers of James's philosophy inhabit schools of medicine and law
as well as divinity, and his ideas inspire those working in sites
ranging from psychology laboratories and corporate board rooms to
the White House, this sparkling collection reminds us why James
remains alive today.
*James T. Kloppenberg, Harvard University*
An admirably broad overview of the author's expansive output.
Scattered too among classic essays are lesser known gems such as
"The Ph.D. Octopus," a brief disquisition on higher education, and
a fascinating 1910 essay on war that might raise some modern
eyebrows for its exhortation to substitute war between men for
"warfare against nature."
*Publishers Weekly*
Editor Richardson provides a perceptive introduction to the
material, as well as separate insights into each selection.
*Library Journal*
William James, brother of the--in some quarters--more famous Henry,
was that rarest of beings, a philosopher who wrote clear, elegant,
and exciting prose. In The Heart of William James, James's
biographer Robert Richardson has put together a dazzling selection
of this great thinker's work, with perfectly judged short pieces to
usher in each of the selections.
*The Guardian*
It is difficult for any selection to do justice to the thought of
William James, and difficult as well for a reviewer to do justice
to the seventeen fine essays collected in The Heart of William
James. He is fortunate to have Robert Richardson as his biographer,
editor and interpreter, a kindred spirit whose admiration for James
is thoroughly compounded with his enjoyment of him. He makes the
great man accessible as if he were presenting an honored friend,
ready to step out of the way and allow a wonderful conversation to
begin. And James is indeed a remarkable acquaintance, full of the
pleasures of fine prose and humorous insight, and demanding all the
same.
*The Nation*
James seeks to instruct his readers in how they can achieve their
best selves, how they can retain and expand and nourish their
individuality. As this collection makes clear, he has good reason
to fear that that individuality is being squandered. In fact, the
subtext of all the essays in this collection might very well be:
Americans are in perennial danger of surrendering their
Americanness, and I will do my best to stop them...It was, and is,
the role of William James, the articulator if not the keeper of the
faith, to remind us of who we are and who we were meant to be.
*Commentary*
So fresh is William James's thought and so unbuttoned and
irreverent his character that he is always contemporary; it comes
as something of a shock, therefore, to recall that he was born as
long ago as 1842...James is a philosopher--practical and romantic,
down-to-earth and ecstatic, accommodating and specific--whom we
need ever more urgently in our own times. In Robert Richardson,
whose biography of James is, along with his lives of Thoreau and
Emerson, one of the glories of contemporary American literature,
the philosopher has found a tireless champion and a perceptive
editor. Richardson is that increasingly rare phenomenon among
academics, an enthusiast, even a lover, of his subjects. In this
book, no less than in the biography, he brings to life this great
thinker and rare human being.
*New York Review of Books*
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