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John L. Safford
Phone: 803-938-3772
Room: 139 Schwartz Building
Division of Humanities, Social Science and Education
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Professor
Government and Philosophy
A USC Sumter professor of Government and Philosophy, John L. Safford, has recently published his
fourth book, Invitation to Philosophy: Issues and Options. Dr. Safford and his
wife Virginia moved from California to Sumter in July 1984. Before that, he taught for six years at a
number of colleges, including a campus of the University of California. From 1967 until 1968 he served
as a paratrooper in Vietnam. At USC Sumter he has taught classes in History, Philosophy, Political
Science, and Karate. Of particular interest, he taught graduate-level courses in U.S. Constitutional History.
In 1996 and 2007, he was USC Sumter's nominee for South Carolina's Governor's Professor of the Year Award. Apart from his students, many people know Dr. Safford as the author of some fifty
articles in The Item. More recently, people have become aware of his scholarly record.
In 1987 Safford published Pragmatism and the Progressive Movement in the United States: The
Origin of the New Social Sciences. It was among the first works to document the connection between
American Philosophy and the practice of social science, and University Press of America listed it as a
company best seller. In 1990 Safford and Dr. Hasmukh Raval published a translation of a work on Hindu
religious philosophy, Bhagavad Gita: A Philosophical System. Dr. Raval, assistant professor of
Computer Science, did the translating, and Safford edited the work for philosophical content and wrote
the first draft of the commentary. The virtue of this translation is that it helps make the classical
Hindu philosophy intelligible from the standpoint of the Western philosophical and analytical tradition.
In 1995, Safford combined his on-going study of democracy with South Carolina history and published a journal article
called, "John C. Calhoun, Lani Guinier, and Minority Rights" in PS: Political Science and Politics.
Since then he has had the pleasure of seeing his article favorably cited in other works about democracy. In particular, the Calhoun article was on the required reading list for an American
Government class taught at the University of Rochester in 2005.
The third book,
Democracy is Dangerous: Resisting the Tyranny of the Majority, incorporates
the Calhoun article as it tries to deal with the "democratic disease" of majority tyranny. Whereas "tyranny" usually is thought
of as the misrule of a bad or evil leader, minorities everywhere have worried about the well-intentioned
but injurious rule of democratic majorities. According to Safford, "We see other people as being
prejudiced, not ourselves. (Who, for instance will admit to going to the wrong mosque, church or
synagogue?) As the world generally becomes more and more democratic, minorities everywhere have to be
on guard against the misplaced righteous indignation of those who would pass laws for their
'improvement'. This book is written for the purpose of maintaining the balance between liberty and
democracy." As such, he uses it every semester as his textbook on democracy.
The most recent fourth book,
Invitation to Philosophy: Issues and Options, is the 10th edition of a venerable introductory Philosophy
textbook which has been in print since 1968. The original authors, Stanley Honer and Thomas Hunt, are
deceased and when the third author Dennis L. Okholm decided to teach Theology full time, Wadsworth
Publishers asked Safford to take over the project.
Professor Safford is currently finishing up a book manuscript on The History of
Epistemology, or the science of how knowledge is gained and justified. His last two books
can be obtained at the USC Sumter book store.
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