Жанры
Авторы
Контакты
О сайте
Книжные новинки
Популярные книги
Найти
Главная
Авторы
Группа авторов
Western Philosophy
Читать книгу Western Philosophy - Группа авторов - Страница 1
Оглавление
Предыдущая
Следующая
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
...
137
Оглавление
Купить и скачать книгу
Вернуться на страницу книги Western Philosophy
Оглавление
Страница 1
BLACKWELL PHILOSOPHY ANTHOLOGIES
Western Philosophy
An Anthology
Страница 4
John Cottingham’s
Western Philosophy: An Anthology
Praise for the first edition
Страница 6
Contents
Guide
Pages
Preface
Preface to the Second Edition
Preface to the Third Edition
Acknowledgements
Part I Knowledge and Certainty
Part II Being and Reality
Part III Language and Meaning
Part IV Mind and Body
Part V The Self and Freedom
Part VI God and Religion
Part VII Science and Method
Part VIII Morality and the Good Life
Part IX Problems in Ethics
Part X Authority and the State
Part XI Beauty and Art
Part XII Human Life and its Meaning
Guidance for Readers and Format of the Volume
Introductory Essay: How to Read a Philosophical Text and How to Write about It What Is Philosophical Inquiry?
Exegesis and Criticism
Assessing the Argument
An Example from Berkeley
Making the Subject Your Own
Give It Time
Notes
PART I Knowledge and Certainty Knowledge and Certainty Introduction
1 Innate Knowledge: Plato,
Meno
*
Specimen Questions
Suggestions for Further Reading (Including Internet Resources)
Notes
2 knowledge versus opinion: plato,
Republic
*
Specimen Questions
Suggestions for Further Reading (Including Internet Resources)
Notes
3 Demonstrative Knowledge and Its Starting Points: Aristotle,
Posterior Analytics
*
Specimen Questions
Suggestions for Further Reading (Including Internet Resources)
Notes
4 New Foundations for Knowledge: René Descartes,
Meditations
*
What can be called into doubt
Specimen Questions
Suggestions for Further Reading (Including Internet Resources)
Notes
5 The Senses as the Basis of Knowledge: John Locke,
Essay Concerning Human Understanding
*
Specimen Questions
Suggestions for Further Reading (Including Internet Resources)
Notes
6 Innate Knowledge Defended: Gottfried Leibniz,
New Essays on Human Understanding
*
Specimen Questions
Suggestions for Further Reading (Including Internet Resources)
Notes
7 Scepticism versus Human Nature: David Hume,
Enquiry Concerning Human Understanding
*
Specimen Questions
Suggestions for Further Reading (Including Internet Resources)
Notes
8 Experience and Understanding: Immanuel Kant,
Critique of Pure Reason
*
The distinction between pure and empirical knowledge
We are in possession of certain modes of a priori knowledge, and even the common understanding is never without them
The idea of a transcendental logic
Transition to the transcendental deduction of the categories
Specimen Questions
Suggestions for Further Reading (Including Internet Resources)
Notes
9 From Sense-certainty to Self-consciousness: Georg Hegel,
Phenomenology of Spirit
*
Specimen Questions
Suggestions for Further Reading (Including Internet Resources)
Notes
10 Beliefs Judged by Their Practical Effects: William James,
What Pragmatism Means
*
Specimen Questions
Suggestions for Further Reading (Including Internet Resources)
Notes
11 Against Scepticism: G. E. Moore,
A Defence of Common Sense
*
Specimen Questions
Suggestions for Further Reading (Including Internet Resources)
Notes
12 Does Empirical Knowledge Have a Foundation? Wilfrid Sellars,
The Myth of the Given
*
Specimen Questions
Suggestions for Further Reading (Including Internet Resources)
Notes
PART II Being and Reality Introduction
1 The Allegory of the Cave: Plato,
Republic
*
Specimen Questions
Suggestions for Further Reading (Including Internet Resources)
Notes
2 Individual Substance: Aristotle,
Categories
*
Specimen Questions
Suggestions for Further Reading (Including Internet Resources)
Notes
3 Supreme Being and Created Things: René Descartes,
Principles of Philosophy
*
Specimen Questions
Suggestions for Further Reading (Including Internet Resources)
Notes
4 Qualities and Ideas: John Locke,
Essay Concerning Human Understanding
*
Specimen Questions
Suggestions for Further Reading (Including Internet Resources)
Notes
5 Substance, Life and Activity: Gottfried Leibniz,
New System*
Specimen Questions
Suggestions for Further Reading (Including Internet Resources)
Notes
6 Nothing Outside the Mind: George Berkeley,
Principles of Human Knowledge
*
Specimen Questions
Suggestions for Further Reading (Including Internet Resources)
Notes
7 The Limits of Metaphysical Speculation: David Hume,
Enquiry Concerning Human Understanding*
Specimen Questions
Suggestions for Further Reading (Including Internet Resources)
Notes
8 Metaphysics, Old and New: Immanuel Kant,
Prolegomena
*
Specimen Questions
Suggestions for Further Reading (Including Internet Resources)
Notes
9 Reality as Flux: Alfred Whitehead,
Process and Reality
, and
Science and the Modern World
*
Specimen Questions
Suggestions for Further Reading (Including Internet Resources)
Notes
10 Being and Involvement: Martin Heidegger,
Being and Time
*
Specimen Questions
Suggestions for Further Reading (Including Internet Resources)
Notes
11 The End of Metaphysics? Rudolf Carnap,
The Elimination of Metaphysics
*
Specimen Questions
Suggestions for Further Reading (Including Internet Resources)
Notes
12
The Problem of Ontology: W. V. O. Quine, On What There Is
*
Specimen Questions
Suggestions for Further Reading (Including Internet Resources)
Notes
{buyButton}
Подняться наверх