The insights of classical and neo-pragmatism: Taking pragmatism seriously (Hilary Putnam and Ruth Anna Putnam)
Pragmatism and Verificationism (Hilary Putnam)
What makes pragmatism so different? (Hilary Putnam)
Pragmatism and nonscientific knowledge (Hilary Putnam)
Weaving seamless webs (Ruth Anna Putnam)
Rorty's vision: philosophical courage and social hope (Ruth Anna Putnam)
Reflections on the future of pragmatism (Ruth Anna Putnam)
Key topics in the pragmatism of James and Dewey: Was James a pragmatist? (Ruth Anna Putnam)
Pragmatism and Realism (Hilary Putnam)
What the spilled beans can spell: the difficult and deep realism of William James (Hilary Putnam and Ruth Anna Putnam)
James's theory of truth (Hilary Putnam)
James on truth (again) (Hilary Putnam)
James's philosophical friendships, 1902-1905 (Hilary Putnam)
What James's pragmatism offers us: a reading of chapter 1 of Pragmatism (Hilary Putnam)
Varieties of experience and pluralities of perspective (Ruth Anna Putnam)
James on religion (Ruth Anna Putnam)
The real William James (Hilary Putnam and Ruth Anna Putnam)
Dewey's central insight (Hilary Putnam)
Dewey's epistemology (Ruth Anna Putnam)
Dewey's faith (Ruth Anna Putnam)
Pragmatist conceptions of moral value and democracy: Philosophy as a reconstructive activity: William James on moral philosophy (Hilary Putnam)
The moral impulse (Ruth Anna Putnam)
The moral life of a pragmatist (Ruth Anna Putnam)
Creating facts and values (Ruth Anna Putnam)
Perceiving facts and values (Ruth Anna Putnam)
Democracy and value inquiry (Ruth Anna Putnam)
Democracy as a way of life (Ruth Anna Putnam).