Foreword by Larry A. Hickman Editors' Introduction I. Situations, Experience, and Knowing 1. The Aesthetics of Reality: The Development of Dewey's Ecological Theory of Experience Thomas Alexander 2. Logic and Judgments of Practice Jennifer Welchman 3. Experimental Logic: Normative Theory or Natural History? Vincent Colapietro 4. The Logical Reconstruction of Experience: Dewey and Lewis Sandra Rosenthal 5. Dewey and Quine on the Logic of What There Is John Shook II.
Logical Theory and Forms 6. Prospects for Mathematizing Dewey's Logical Theory Tom Burke 7. Designation, Characterization, and Theory in Dewey's Logic Douglas Browning 8. Dewey's Logical Forms Hans Seigfried 9. The Role of Measurement in Inquiry Jayne Tristan 10. Qualities, Universals, Kinds, and the New Riddle of Induction Tom Burke III. Values and Social Inquiry 11. Achieving Pluralism (Why AIDS Activists Are Different from Creationists) John Capps 12.
The Teachers Union Fight and the Scope of Dewey's Logic Michael Eldridge 13. Power/Inquiry: The Logic of Pragmatism John Stuhr.