This is a glossary of terms for my research program in pragmatic phenomenology/phenomenological pragmatism. My project is a contemporary derivation of John Dewey's work as read through Thomas Alexander, Jim Garrison, James Gouinlock, Victor Kestenbaum, and others. The glossary will be helpful for those interested in peering into the depths of Deweys thought, which is often omitted by contemporary commentaries, and into my own development of it.
For everyone who is curious, I can provide far, far more citations, reference, etc. with little trouble. The "MW" and such citations are to Dewey's collected works using the standard critical edition notation. A warning: the technical terms in this glossary reference each other, and thus the glossary must be read as a whole. Terms that are entirely my own and not Dewey's are marked.
GLOSSARY
Choice
(willing)
There is no faculty of the will.
Choice is a release of energy due to sufficient reintegration of disrupted habit (MW 14:134).
Choice implicates "character," not conscious choice or cognition.
Character
(body of habits/habitual body)
Character is the total interpenetration of habit.
(See Dewey's Ethics)
Reasonableness
(rationality)
Reasonableness is the effective immanent organization of desire per "emotional sensitiveness" (MW 14:137-138). The organization is a "quality of effective relationships among desires" (MW 14:135). Reasonableness is habituated from the environment; the individual is reasonable only if the environment is so (cf Dewey's The Public and Its Problems).
Agency
(freedom)
Agency is the immanent determination of the object of desire (or so-ordered activity). Agency is primarily attributed to the situation and secondarily to the human being. Agency within the scope of conscious experience implies a unity and integrity of character such that choice is conscious rather than autonomous.
(see also Gouinlock, Dewey's Philosophy of Value, 282-286)
Desire
Desire is the organic ordered and telic activity of the human organism. It is a process from which characteristic events emerge, e.g., paradigmatic case is "conscious desire." "Desire" is a synonymous for the human process of valuation.
Significations:
process--"valuation"
event--"felt emotion"/"conscious desire"/"desire"
(see also Gouinlock, Dewey's Philosophy of Value and Dewey's Theory of Valuation)
Conscious Desire
Conscious desire occurs when ongoing activity meets environmental/habitual resistence; conscious desire emerges as an affective response to signal a problematic situation. "Conscious desire" connotes a telos while "affect" and "felt emotion" do not.
Feeling (Dewey)
Feeling is a realization of a potentiality, by definition (LW 1:204, 227).
(See Dewey, Experience and Nature)
Feeling (Hills--derivative of Dewey and Alexander)
Feeling is the prereflective sensitivity to the structure of a situation that presents tacit environmental involvement as felt quality. Feeling is a continual and persistent process, and presents sufficiently tensive relationships. Feeling is intentional (anticipative) and its predominate quality is affect/mood.
Significations:
process--"feeling"
event--"felt quality"
(see also Alexander, Horizons of Feeling; Rosenthal, Speculative Pragmatism)
Felt Quality
(quality in its phenomenological denotation)
Felt quality is a distinct event in which the relatively passive sensitivity of feeling meets sufficient resistance to become felt quality. Felt quality is also a First of a Second in Peircean terminology (cf Dewey's article on Peirce). The particular quality is determined by the characteristic differentiae of the disrupted habitual coordination (cf Dewey's "Emotion," Garrison's "Emotion," or Hills'
Immanent Transcendence).
(see also Dewey, "Qualitative Thought"; Experience and Nature)
Consciousness
(conscious experience)
Feeling comprises the lowest level of conscious awareness, as consciousness is "on the psycho-physical level … the totality of actualized immediate qualitative differences, or 'feelings’" (LW 1:229).
Mind
(linguistic and/or cognitive consciousness, reflective experience)
"Mind" is the "actualized apprehensions of meanings, that is, ideas," and therefore "consciousness" is not identical to "mind," since the latter is discursive and beyond the scope of the present analysis (LW 1:229).
Emotion
Emotion is a modification of feeling that is a focusing, affective response to disruptively tensive relationships. As a distinct event, it is paradigmatically an assertive, affective summons to reconstructed, focal experience. Phenomenologically, it is in a foreground/background relationship with feeling.
Signification:
process--"emotion"
event--"felt emotion"
(see also Alexander, Horizons of Feeling; Rosenthal, Speculative Pragmatism; Kestenbaum, Phenomenological Sense of John Dewey)
Felt Emotion
(affect, desire, felt difficulty, etc)
Felt emotion is an event in which the activity of emotion registers in focal attention as felt.
Has a genus-species relationship with felt tension (species).
Triadic Model of Consciousness (Hills)
Conscious experience occurs through a continual triadic event of activity, resistance, and presentation. In short, resistance to ongoing activity constitutes conscious presentation of the environment. Resistance and thereby presentation occur through a dynamic transaction of the organism and the environment, the whole of which is a situation. Resistance is first felt and becomes sense, object, and thought depending on the situational conditions.
Resistance
Existential environmental condition that resists ongoing habitual activity.
(See also Dewey, Logic)
Tension
The feeling of resistance. Tension is existential, while tension is qualitative.
(See also Dewey, Logic)
Presentation
Consciously experiencing a quality/phenomenon.
Associative Structure (Hills)
anticipatory pre-objective "horizon" of the habitual body. is given in feeling. founds imaginative horizon.
phenomenological
(see also Dewey, "Qualitative Thought" and Kestenbaum, Phenomenological Sense)
Imagination (Alexander)
1. extension of activity
2. temporally complex event
3. projected possibilities of action
extends activity into the possible
(Alexander, “Pragmatic Imagination,” “Moral Imagination,” Horizons of Feeling)
Imagination (Hills—Alexander derivative)
Imagination is the activity of giving meaning to conscious experience. This is primarily the activity of habitual projection in conscious experience. Imagination projects an imaginative horizon that includes the momentary comprehensive meaning of an immediate object or situation.
“the persistent operation of a prior object which has been incorporated in effective habit” (MW 14:40).
(Hills, “Limited Horizons,” Immanent Transcendence)
Horizon (Hills-Alexander derivative)
(imaginative horizon)
The imaginative horizon is the anticipatory limit (horizon) of conscious experience. is the complete, momentary habitual possibilities for action given momentary possibilities of (mediated) stimuli.
phenomenological
from “Limited Horizons,”
“Since the meaning of an object is the range of anticipated consequences of its enaction, the horizon includes the momentary comprehensive meaning of an immediate object.”
(see also Alexander, Horizons of Feeling and various articles)
Object
An object is a localized field of foiled anticipation that has recoiled as (consciousness of) some disruptively tensive region of experience. It's qualitative character is given per past habituations (experiences), present situation (e.g., perception)/context, anticipation (future). An object need not be attended to.
Significations:
process--"objection," or "objective experience"
event--"object"
"An object, in other terms, is a series of qualities treated as potentialities of specific existential consequences." (Deledalle, Histoire de la philosophie americaine, 158)
(see also MW 14, Kestenbaum, Phenomenological Sense; Rosenthal, Specualtive Pragmatism)
Immediate Object
An object that is immediately experienced in primary experience.
Idea
An idea is an attentively apprehended possibility for action thematized as meaningful. An attentively apprehended object becomes an idea. The process of converting an object into an idea is idealization.
Ideal
creative projection of past experience.
taken as a kind of end-in-view.
phenomenal
(see also Dewey, 1932 Ethics)
Ideal Object
presented (ideal) unification of disrupted habit. is a sign for the presentation of relatively unified habit that is not present.
phenomenological
semiotic
sign for anticipated reintegration of underlying disrupted habit
(see also Dewey, "Desire and Intelligence," in Human Nature and Conduct)
Idealization
the process of a feeling/emotive thematic unification of disrupted habit "prior" to cognitive control.
phenomenological
process
Phenomenology (pragmatic)
the study of the logic of conscious phenomena. Pragmatic phenomenology is the study how habit informs experience, e.g., how the pre-objective phase informs the objective phase of experience. This phenomenology, per Dewey's theory of continuity that implicates process metaphysics, connects conscious phenomena to the prior phases of the organic process that are not experienced as phenomena, not given, and therefore illegitimate in Husserlian phenomenology.
EDITS: Edited almost every entry. Added "idea," "imagination (Alexander), "imagination (Hills)," "consciousness," "mind." This glossary is 2 years old; I am updating it and changes will be ongoing.