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  1. Scot Danforth. The current biographic understanding of John Dewey's experience adopting and raising an Italian boy named Sabino emphasizes the theme of finding an emotional replacement for Morris and Gordon, two young sons who had tragically died on family trips to Europe.

    • Scot Danforth
  2. The Correspondence of John Dewey. 4 volumes. Carbondale: Southern Illinois University Press, 1999-2005. Available on CD-ROM by Intelex. Volume 1: 1871-1918 (1999), introduced by Larry A. Hickman. Volume 2: 1919-1939 (2002), introduced by Michael Eldridge Volume 3: 1940-1953 (2005), introduced by John R. Shook.

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  4. Feb 1, 2018 · Background/Context. The current biographic understanding of John Dewey's experience adopting and raising an Italian boy named Sabino emphasizes the theme of finding an emotional replacement for Morris and Gordon, two young sons who had tragically died on family trips to Europe.

    • Scot Danforth
  5. 1996 electronic edition of Works About John Dewey: 1886-1995 , edited and compiled by Barbara Levine. It takes its place alongside other electronic editions prepared at the Center and now available to researchers, including Dewey's Collected Works, 1882-1953 (InteLex Corp.,1996), and The Correspondence of John Dewey, 1871-1954

  6. to forge new thought. While at Johns Hopkins, John Dewey studied with the philosophers George Sylvester Morris (who was also a faculty member at the University of Michigan) and Charles Sanders Peirce, as well as the psychologist Granville Stanley Hall. It was the Hegelian Morris, his strongest influence at this time, who would help Dewey

    • Anne Durst
    • 2010
  7. years, but unfortunately Dewey lost the manuscripts. In mid-1951, Dewey told a New York Times reporter that he was working on a new book that may be the most comprehensive outline of his educational philosophy. But before Dewey completed this work, he died in 1952. Martin's book is an enjoyable biography with many revelations about Dewey.

  8. Smith, Warren Allen. “Dewey, John (1854-1952)‚” in Who’s Who in Hell. New York: Barricade Books, 2000. John Dewey was not a member but was a close friend of the Unitarian movement. The memorial service celebrating his life was held at a church with a long-distinguished Unitarian heritage, the Community Church of New York.

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