The Story of Western PhilosophyThis book was born of the paperback boom, and it is meant as an aid in the interpretation of the history of Western philosophy. It is designed especially for use in a course in the history of philosophy, but I hope that it may also prove useful for other purposes, such as an historical introduction to philosophy or a comprehensive review of the history of philosophy or just as a help to the general reader trying to make some sense out of the history of Western philosophy.-Preface. |
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Page 28
... contains , in different amounts , all the different kinds of seeds . No matter how pure a piece of " pure " gold may be , it also contains the seeds of other metals and of all other things what- soever . In this way he accounts for the ...
... contains , in different amounts , all the different kinds of seeds . No matter how pure a piece of " pure " gold may be , it also contains the seeds of other metals and of all other things what- soever . In this way he accounts for the ...
Page 179
... contains within itself nothing but what is clear . " The most important idea , as we shall see increasingly , is that of distinctness , the idea that a thing is so sharply marked off from all other things that it contains nothing of ...
... contains within itself nothing but what is clear . " The most important idea , as we shall see increasingly , is that of distinctness , the idea that a thing is so sharply marked off from all other things that it contains nothing of ...
Page 204
... contains the characteristic of the other , either formally or emi- nently . The mind contains no extension by which it could pro- duce any bodily event , and body contains no thought by which it could produce any mental event ...
... contains the characteristic of the other , either formally or emi- nently . The mind contains no extension by which it could pro- duce any bodily event , and body contains no thought by which it could produce any mental event ...
Contents
The Philosophical Story Previewed | 3 |
The Cosmological Philosophers | 13 |
The Anthropological Philosophers | 34 |
Copyright | |
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Absolute actual Anaxagoras ancient and medieval argument Aristotle Aristotle's believe Berkeley body British Empiricism categorical imperative causal cause concept conclusion Continental Rationalism Copernican creative Descartes Descartes's dialectic distinct Empiricists epistemology essence ethics everything existence external extra-mental fact faith Fichte finite freedom fundamental German Voluntarism Hegel Hence Heraclitus Hobbes human Hume Hume's Ibid ideas infinite intuitive Kant Kant's Leibniz Locke Locke's logical losophy material mathematics matter means medieval philosophy mental Metaphysics mind modern philosophy monads monism moral nature necessarily nonbeing objects of knowledge ontological argument opposites Parmenides particular perfect phenomena Plato Plotinus possible principle principle of distinctness priori forms problem propositions Pure Reason Rationalists reality revolution Schelling sensation sense experience sensory skepticism Socrates solipsism soul Spinoza spirit stage story of Western subject and object substance synthesis theory things thought tion transcendent true truth ultimate universal and necessary virtue Western philosophy