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Introduction: John Dewey and the Public Sphere

Introduction: John Dewey and the Public Sphere ARGUMENTATION AND ADVOCACY 39 (Winter 2003): 157-160 THE JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN FORENSIC ASSOCIATION ARGUMENTATIO~ADVOCACY INTRODUCTION: JOHN DEWEY AND THE PUBLIC SPHERE Robert Asen and Daniel C. Brouwer Assessments ofJohn Dewey's influence in ence" (p. 321) to his concept of reflective the communication discipline have paral­ thinking in the early years of the field. leled, in some respects, assessments of the In the ensuing decades, perceptions of vitality of the public sphere-one can tell a diminished interest in his scholarship story of rise and fall. During the formative prompted a series of articles urging scholars years of the discipline, Dewey's scholarship to (re)tum to Dewey. Contributors to a 1968 exerted a strong influence. In his history of special issue of Western Speech exploring the speech discipline, Herman Cohen con­ "The Influence of John Dewey Upon cludes that "the dominant influence of John Speech" wondered why no one cited Dewey. Dewey, and particularly of his How We Think Most incredulous was Don Burks, whose of 1910, became evident very early and con­ claim that "perhaps no philosopher since tinued throughout the 20s, 30s and 40s" Aristotle has more to offer the rhetorician (1994, p. 320). In particular, his writings on http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png Argumentation and Advocacy Taylor & Francis

Introduction: John Dewey and the Public Sphere

Argumentation and Advocacy , Volume 39 (3): 4 – Jan 1, 2003

Introduction: John Dewey and the Public Sphere

Abstract

ARGUMENTATION AND ADVOCACY 39 (Winter 2003): 157-160 THE JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN FORENSIC ASSOCIATION ARGUMENTATIO~ADVOCACY INTRODUCTION: JOHN DEWEY AND THE PUBLIC SPHERE Robert Asen and Daniel C. Brouwer Assessments ofJohn Dewey's influence in ence" (p. 321) to his concept of reflective the communication discipline have paral­ thinking in the early years of the field. leled, in some respects, assessments of the In the ensuing decades, perceptions of vitality of the public...
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Publisher
Taylor & Francis
Copyright
© 2003 Taylor and Francis Group, LLC
ISSN
2576-8476
eISSN
1051-1431
DOI
10.1080/00028533.2003.11821583
Publisher site
See Article on Publisher Site

Abstract

ARGUMENTATION AND ADVOCACY 39 (Winter 2003): 157-160 THE JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN FORENSIC ASSOCIATION ARGUMENTATIO~ADVOCACY INTRODUCTION: JOHN DEWEY AND THE PUBLIC SPHERE Robert Asen and Daniel C. Brouwer Assessments ofJohn Dewey's influence in ence" (p. 321) to his concept of reflective the communication discipline have paral­ thinking in the early years of the field. leled, in some respects, assessments of the In the ensuing decades, perceptions of vitality of the public sphere-one can tell a diminished interest in his scholarship story of rise and fall. During the formative prompted a series of articles urging scholars years of the discipline, Dewey's scholarship to (re)tum to Dewey. Contributors to a 1968 exerted a strong influence. In his history of special issue of Western Speech exploring the speech discipline, Herman Cohen con­ "The Influence of John Dewey Upon cludes that "the dominant influence of John Speech" wondered why no one cited Dewey. Dewey, and particularly of his How We Think Most incredulous was Don Burks, whose of 1910, became evident very early and con­ claim that "perhaps no philosopher since tinued throughout the 20s, 30s and 40s" Aristotle has more to offer the rhetorician (1994, p. 320). In particular, his writings on

Journal

Argumentation and AdvocacyTaylor & Francis

Published: Jan 1, 2003

References