John Dewey was an American philosopher, psychologist, and educator. He was one of the most important thinkers in the United States during the first half of the twentieth century. He was born on 20 October 1859 in Burlington, Vermont. He studied at the University of Vermont and then earned a PhD in philosophy at Johns Hopkins University in 1884. He taught first at the University of Michigan. In 1894 he moved to the new University of Chicago. In 1896 he founded the Laboratory School there. This was a small school where his new ideas about learning could be tested with real children. During his Chicago years he became close to Jane Addams at Hull House. The two thinkers shaped each other's ideas about democracy. After a dispute with the university, he resigned in 1904. He moved to Columbia University in New York, where he stayed until his retirement in 1930. At Columbia he wrote most of his major books. These included Democracy and Education (1916), Experience and Nature (1925), The Public and Its Problems (1927), and Art as Experience (1934). He travelled widely. He spent more than two years in China (1919-1921), where he gave famous lectures. He also visited Japan, Turkey, Mexico, and the Soviet Union. In 1937 he led a public inquiry into Stalin's charges against Leon Trotsky. He helped found the NAACP, a major American civil rights organisation. He wrote over forty books and around a thousand articles. He died on 1 June 1952, aged 92.
Dewey matters for three reasons. First, he changed how people think about education. Before Dewey, most schools treated children as empty vessels. Teachers poured in facts; students memorised them and repeated them in tests. Dewey argued this was wrong. Children learn by doing, not by listening. They understand ideas by using them, testing them, and living them. He called this 'learning by doing'. His 1916 book Democracy and Education spread this approach around the world. Progressive education in many countries traces back to Dewey.
Second, he helped develop pragmatism. Pragmatism is an American school of philosophy. It says ideas are tools, not pictures of a fixed reality. An idea is good if it works in practice, if it helps us solve problems. Dewey, with William James and Charles Peirce, built pragmatism into a full system. He applied it to education, science, art, politics, and ethics. Pragmatism is still one of the most important American contributions to world philosophy.
Third, he saw democracy as more than a political system. For Dewey, democracy was a way of life. It was how people cooperate, solve problems, and learn together. Voting alone was not enough. A democracy needs schools that teach thinking. It needs workplaces that respect workers. It needs a public that talks honestly about real problems. His view of democracy still influences how many thinkers today understand freedom, community, and citizenship.
For a first introduction, Dewey's Experience and Education (1938) is short and readable. It is his clearest statement of his educational views late in life. The Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy has a solid article on Dewey. Louis Menand's The Metaphysical Club (2001) is an excellent book about American pragmatism that features Dewey as a central figure. For audio, the BBC In Our Time episode on pragmatism gives good context.
For deeper reading, Democracy and Education (1916) is Dewey's most famous book but can be slow going; readers new to him might start with How We Think (1910). The Public and Its Problems (1927) is essential for his political theory. Experience and Nature (1925) is his major metaphysical work. For biography, Jay Martin's The Education of John Dewey (2002) is comprehensive. Alan Ryan's John Dewey and the High Tide of American Liberalism (1995) places him in his political context.
Dewey thought children should just do whatever they want.
He did not. Some later versions of 'progressive education' have taken that extreme view. Dewey rejected it explicitly. He argued against both old-fashioned schools (where children only memorise and obey) and permissive schools (where children do only what interests them). His view was that teachers should guide students through carefully chosen activities that connect their interests to serious subject matter. Freedom without direction is not education. Direction without freedom is not education either. Finding the balance requires skilled teachers.
Pragmatism means 'whatever works for you is true'.
This popular version of pragmatism is not what Dewey or other serious pragmatists meant. Pragmatism does not say any belief that feels helpful is true. It says ideas are tested by their consequences in practice, over time, with careful evidence. A belief that feels good but leads to bad outcomes is not pragmatically true. A scientific theory is accepted not because it pleases anyone but because it consistently explains evidence and predicts new findings. Pragmatism is a demanding standard for truth, not a permissive one.
Dewey was only a philosopher of education.
Education was one of his main concerns, but only one. He wrote major works on metaphysics (what exists), epistemology (how we know), ethics, psychology, politics, art, and religion. His books Experience and Nature (1925) and The Public and Its Problems (1927) are works of general philosophy, not only education. Reducing him to 'the education guy' misses how his whole philosophical system hangs together. It also hides how his ideas about education came from deeper thinking about experience, knowledge, and democracy.
Jane Addams was Dewey's assistant or helper, not his equal.
She was his intellectual partner and, by some accounts, his senior in the development of democratic theory. Dewey himself said Hull House taught him more than many universities. Addams produced original philosophy and sociology of her own. For many decades, Dewey got the credit for ideas they developed together while Addams was remembered only as a social worker. Recent scholarship has restored the balance. Both should be read as major American pragmatist thinkers. Treating Addams as Dewey's junior miscounts the record.
For research-level engagement, the Collected Works of John Dewey, edited by Jo Ann Boydston, in 37 volumes, is the standard scholarly edition. Richard Rorty's Consequences of Pragmatism and later works engage extensively with Dewey from a contemporary angle. Cornel West's The American Evasion of Philosophy treats Dewey as central to the American pragmatist tradition. On the Dewey-Addams partnership, see Charlene Haddock Seigfried's Pragmatism and Feminism (1996). Philosophy journals including Transactions of the Charles S. Peirce Society and the Journal of Speculative Philosophy regularly publish work on Dewey.
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