The Will to Believe" and James's "Deontological Streak

Transactions of the Charles S. Peirce Society 28 (4):809 - 831 (1992)
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Abstract

James's ethical thought could frequently be consequentialist, but it could also on occasion show a deontological side, or "streak," as I contended in "William James on the Courage to Believe". This shows up when he speaks of the "strenuous" as against the "easy-going" moral mood, in "The Moral Philosopher and the Moral Life," and it preserves the precursive intervention of our "passional natures" in "The Will to Believe" from lapsing into "wishful thinking." Toned down slightly, perhaps, in "Varieties of Religious Experience", it reasserts itself in "Pragmatism", and, it could be shown, in James's succeeding works as well

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