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Pragmatism and Prophecy: H. G. Wells and the Metaphysics of Socialism

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  • BELL, DUNCAN

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Read throughout the world, H. G. Wells was one of the most famous political thinkers of the early twentieth century. During the first half of the 1900s, he elaborated a bold and idiosyncratic cosmopolitan socialist vision. In this article, I offer a new reading of Wells's political thought. I argue that he developed a distinctive pragmatist philosophical orientation, which he synthesized with his commitments to Darwinian evolutionary theory. His pragmatism had four main components: a nominalist metaphysics; a verificationist theory of truth; a Jamesian “will to believe†; and a conception of philosophy as an intellectual exercise dedicated to improving practice. His political thought was shaped by this philosophical orientation. Wells, I contend, was the most high-profile pragmatist political thinker of the opening decades of the twentieth century. Acknowledging this necessitates a re-evaluation of both Wells and the history of pragmatism.

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  • Bell, Duncan, 2018. "Pragmatism and Prophecy: H. G. Wells and the Metaphysics of Socialism," American Political Science Review, Cambridge University Press, vol. 112(2), pages 409-422, May.
  • Handle: RePEc:cup:apsrev:v:112:y:2018:i:02:p:409-422_00
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