Considered by some the most controversial American philosopher of
contemporary times, SIDNEY HOOK (1902-1989) was infamous for the wild
swing in his political thought over the course of his career, starting
out as a young Marxist before the Great Depression and ending up a
vehement anti-Communist in his later years. The Metaphysics of
Pragmatism-Hook's first work, originally published in 1927-is something
of a malicious joke on the philosopher's part, one he readily
acknowledges in his introduction, a bringing together of one discipline,
that of metaphysics, with the one generally regarded as its polar
opposite, that of pragmatism, for the purposes of rescuing the second.
Though not a political work at all-except, possibly, one of academic
politics-this is nevertheless a fascinating introduction to this
notorious figure. In its expression of the author's "passionate moral
interest in the creative power... of human thinking," it may, perhaps,
begin to lend some understanding to the shifts in his own thinking that
characterized his work.