1918 June 22

Philosopher John Dewey Sees Social Benefits of War

 

In the midst of World War I, John Dewey, arguably the most noted philosopher in American history, published an article contending that American participation in the war had many social benefits.

In particular, Dewey welcomed the idea that the military draft had placed “public need over private possession” (see below), and in general justified government regulation without regard for civil liberties consideration. The article, “The Social Possibilities of War,” was published in the progressive magazine, The Independent.

Dewey was savagely attacked by one of his former students, Randolph Bourne, who argued that the pro-war intellectuals had betrayed their intellectual integrity. Bourne, who died on December 22, 1918, left a lasting imprint on American political thinking, and his powerful essays were reprinted during World War II and the Vietnam War because of their relevance to the role of intellectuals in those conflicts.

Apart from the offensive civil liberties aspects, Dewey’s article is, in several respects, very prophetic about the trend toward greater industrialization, increased government regulation, and globalization.

After World War I, Dewey rethought his position on this and some other issues, and by the 1930s became an active civil libertarian.

Dewey: “Again, the war has added to the old lesson of public sanitary regulation the new lesson of social regulation for purposes of moral prophylaxis. The acceleration of the movement to control the liquor traffic is another aspect of the same fact. Finally, conscription has brought home to the countries which have in the past been the home of the individualistic tradition the supremacy of public need over private possession.”

Read Dewey’s articlehttp://teachingamericanhistory.org/library/document/the-social-possibilities-of-war-2/

Learn more about Randolph Bourne: Jeremy McCarter, Young Radicals in the War for American Ideals (2017)

Learn about Bourne at the Randolph Bourne Institute: http://randolphbourne.org/

Read about Dewey: David Fott, John Dewey: America’s Philosopher of Democracy (1998)

Find a Day

Go
Abortion Rights ACLU african-americans Alice Paul anti-communism Anti-Communist Hysteria Birth Control Brown v. Board of Education Censorship CIA Civil Rights Civil Rights Act of 1964 Cold War Espionage Act FBI First Amendment Fourteenth Amendment freedom of speech Free Speech Gay Rights Hate Speech homosexuality Hoover, J. Edgar HUAC Japanese American Internment King, Dr. Martin Luther Ku Klux Klan Labor Unions Lesbian and Gay Rights Loyalty Oaths McCarthy, Sen. Joe New York Times Obscenity Police Misconduct Same-Sex Marriage Separation of Church and State Sex Discrimination Smith Act Spying Spying on Americans Vietnam War Voting Rights Voting Rights Act of 1965 War on Terror Watergate White House Women's Rights Women's Suffrage World War I World War II Relocation Camps

Topics

Tell Us What You Think

We want to hear your comments, criticisms and suggestions!