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The Drama of Possibility
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15 June 2007

This book traces the trajectory of John J. McDermott’s philosophical career through a selection of his essays. Many were originally occasional pieces and address specific issues in American thought and culture. Together they constitute a mosaic of McDermott’s philosophy, showing its roots in an American conception of experience. Though he draws heavily on the thought of William James and the pragmatists, McDermott has his own unique perspective on philosophy and American life. He presents this to the reader in exquisitely crafted prose. Drawing inspiration from American history, from existentialist themes, and from personal experiences, he offers a dramatic consideration of our culture’s failures and successes.
McDermott crosses disciplinary boundaries to draw on whatever works to help make sense of the
issues with which he is dealing—issues rooted in medical practice, political events, pedagogical habits, and the worlds of the arts. His work thus resists simple categorization. It is precisely this that makes his vibrant prose appealing to so many both inside and outside the world of American philosophy.
John McDermott's essays help us understand the mind of America by laying
bare its heart. In print and in the classroom, McDermott is a great
teacher, a marveloulsy sensitive human being and an exemplary
American. These essays, some of them legendary, revive and develop the
grand achievements of Emerson and James.
“Fresh and down-to-earth. . . . Reflects a deep and attentive familiarity with the history
of thought, as well as a sensitive and penetrating understanding of American history and culture.”
“McDermott’s personal style, beautifully seeded with anecdotes and his own experience,
make this book as dramatic as the title.”
. . . Not only provides an aperture in the philosophical dialogue with Foucault's thought, but it is first and foremost a seminal work in the field of philosophy and the humanities as a whole.
In the American tradition of Jonathan Edwards, Ralph Waldo Emerson and William James, John J. McDermott is both an original philosopher and a literary figure of distinction.---—Peter H. Hare, State University of New York
John J. McDermott's words, spoken or written, fall like torrents or hang like mist as he explores the themes of human experience. His ideas, tinctured with medieval philosophy and snips of baseball, drawing upon his familiarity with the artist's studio and the physician's office, help us to make the connections necessary to celebrate and criticize the diverse aspects of our common journey. Readers of this broad selection of McDermott's writings will recognize his sensitivity to experience and his power as a teacher.---—James Campbell, University of Toledo