Towards the end of one of Dewey\u27s famous polemical essays, The Need for a Recovery of Philosophy, published in 1917 in a cooperative volume entitled Creative Intelligence, there occurs this sentence: Philosophy recovers itself when it ceases to be a device for dealing with the problems of philosophers and becomes a method, cultivated by philosophers, for dealing with the problems of men. Twenty-nine years later, towards the end of his life, he published a collection of his essays with the title, Problems of Men. In an essay prepared for that volume he reiterated the theme that philosophers must be concerned with the problems of men, and, again, in the 1948 Introduction to the reprint of Reconstruction in Philosophy he called for a re...