Posted on August 27, 2019
Henry Levinson
In this first detailed examination of <3>Varieties of Religious Experience<1>, Levinson locates James securely in the academic study of religion, demonstrates James’s debts to Darwin, and reconstructs the case for the supernatural that James thought so critical to his work. The author discusses the contribution that these religious interests made to James’s later work and to the shaping of his theories of pragmatism and radical empiricism.
Originally published 1981.