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  1. What would John Dewey say about Deliberative Democracy and Democratic Experimentalism?Gregory Fernando Pappas - 2012 - Contemporary Pragmatism 9 (2):57-74.
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  • Dewey's philosophy and the experience of working: Labor, tools and language.Jim Garrison - 1995 - Synthese 105 (1):87 - 114.
    Although Richard Rorty has done much to renew interest in the philosophy of John Dewey, he nonetheless rejects two of the most important components of Dewey's philosophy, that is, his metaphysics and epistemology. Following George Santayana, Rorty accuses Dewey of trying to serve Locke and Hegel, an impossibility as Rorty rightly sees it. Rorty (1982) says that Dewey should have been Hegelian all the way (p. 85). By reconstructing a bit of Hegel's early philosophy of work, and comparing it to (...)
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  • (1 other version)John Dewey's Pragmatic Technology.Larry A. HICKMAN - 1990 - Transactions of the Charles S. Peirce Society 28 (2):343-350.
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  • Equality and freedom in the workplace: Recovering republican insights.Elizabeth Anderson - 2015 - Social Philosophy and Policy 31 (2):48-69.
    "The terms do not have to be spelled out, because they have been set not by a meeting of minds of the parties, but by a default baseline defined by corporate, property, and employment law that establishes the legal parameters for the constitution of capitalist firms." p. 2.
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  • Arbeit als Ort von Ungerechtigkeit und Herrschaft. Die Grenzen der zeitgenössischen politischen Philosophie.Jean-Philippe Deranty & Emmanuel Renault - 2012 - Deutsche Zeitschrift für Philosophie 60 (4):573-592.
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