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Index
Thales to Dewey Foreword Preface I. Greek Philosophy 1. The Presocratics What Is Philosophy? The Milesians Unity and Multiplicity A Principle Must Explain Problems of Thales’ Disciples Culture in Isolation Heraclitus The Pythagoreans Homeric and Mystery Religions Mathematics Parmenides Logic and Nonsense Absolute Unity The Meaning of “Is” Consistent Monism The Pluralists Empedocles Anaxagoras Democritus Inescapable Motion Zeno 2. The Sophists, Socrates, and Plato The Rise of Skepticism Mathematical Irrationality History and Politics The Educators Knowledge and Morality Lesser Hippias Socrates and Protagoras Can Virtue Be Taught? Anticipatory Comment Sophistic Epistemology Queer Logic The Man-Measure Theory No One Can Be Mistaken Everyone Is Mistaken Objections and Answers Plato’s Reply Plato’s Further Reply Incorporeal Reality The Phaedo The Care of the Soul Immortality Reminiscence The Objects of Knowledge Souls Akin to Ideas Philosophy for Life and Death The Harmony The Weaver’s Coat Epiphenomenalism Natural Science Mechanical and Teleological Explanation The Method of Hypothesis The Problems Solved The Parmenides Ideas of Mud? Participation The Third Man Nominalism Plato’s Foresight But Can Ideas Be Known? The Timaeus Being and Becoming Becoming and Causation Scientific Detail 3. Aristotle The Law of Contradiction Logic and Reality Indemonstrable Axioms Significant Speech Denial of Substance An Ethical Anticipation Refutation of Protagoras Change Is Not Universal Logic The Categories Substance Relation Quality Epistemology Cause and Demonstration Primary Premises Non-scientific Knowledge From Science to God Motion Potentiality and Actuality No First Motion Movers A First Mover Motionless Movers A First Motion God Form and Matter The Four Causes Teleology Matter and Generation Individuals and God 4. The Hellenistic Age The Epicureans Religious Superstition Chance and Free Will Sensation Pleasure Death The Stoics Against Skepticism Materialism Fatalism God and Fate Universal Causation Logic and Fate The Objections The Rational Life Neoplatonism Refutation of Materialism Against Aristotle Cosmology and Ethics Platonic Themes The One II. The Middle Ages 5. The Patristic Period Paganism and Christianity Greek Immanentism Hebrew Transcendence Functions of Revelation Superficial Similarities Alleged Sources of Pauline Theology Two Cautions Philo Allegory Platonic Ideas in Moses The Logos Transcendence and Knowledge Revelation and Skepticism Essence and Attribute The Early Patristics The Theology of Jesus Historical Divisions Minor Patristics Augustine Skepticism and Happiness Truth and God Communication Creation History Time Evil Free Will Pelagius The Dark Ages 6. The Scholastic Period John Scotus Eriugena Anselm Conceptualism The Mohammedans Thomas Aquinas Faith and Reason Natural Theology Sensation, Imagination, and Intellect Duns Scotus Omnipotence and Freedom Individuation William of Occam III. Modern Philosophy 7. Seventeenth-Century Rationalism The New Civilization René Descartes The Cogito and Logic God and Mathematics Error and Free Will The Material World Soul and Body Baruch Spinoza Definition and Existence The Best of All Possible Worlds Rational Causality One Substance Mechanism and Thought Ethics and Freedom Sub Specie Aeternitatis G. W. Leibniz The Monads Teleology and Mechanism 8. British Empiricism John Locke Innate Ideas Simple Ideas Compound Ideas Abstract Ideas Ideas of Relation But Do We Know Reality? George Berkeley Abstract Ideas Can Two Senses Perceive the Same Idea? Esse Est Percipi Do You and I Exist? Science and Causality Do Two and Three Equal Five? David Hume Do We Think in Images? Who Does the Thinking? Causality Again Why Believe in God? Skepticism 9. Immanuel Kant The A Priori Space and Mathematics An Intuition Synthetic and Analytic Judgments An Illustration Things in Themselves Physics and Logic A Priori Concepts Unification of Experience Synthesis The Categories Causality A Theistic View The Laws of Science Extensive Quantities Intensive Quantities Necessary Connection Permanent Substance Cause and Effect The Existence of God Mechanics and Morality The Ethics of Calculation The Categorical Imperative Freedom The Two Worlds Teleology and Organism Regulative and Constitutive Principles 10. G. W. F. Hegel Minor Post-Kantians Jacobi Johann Gottlieb Fichte The Phenomenology of Mind Dialectical Evolution of Truth The Law of Contradiction Results and Methods Romanticism Substance and Subject The Truth Is the Whole Universal Mind The History of Philosophy Scientific Procedure History and Mathematics Being Is Thought Propositions and Concepts Sense Certainty The Logic The Categories Comparison with Kant No Unknowable Herr Krug’s Pen 11. Contemporary Irrationalism Post-Hegelian Thought in Germany Arthur Schopenhauer David Friedrich Strauss Ludwig Feuerbach Karl Marx Dialectical Materialism Collectivism Too Religious Human Activity Making Man Human The Abandonment of Reason Søren Kierkegaard The Individual The State Church Subjectivity of Truth Recent Development Friedrich Nietzsche Evolution The Superman Eternal Recurrence The Forms of Reason Pragmatism Auguste Comte Émile Durkheim Charles Bernard Renouvier and Émile Boutroux William James The Serpent of Rationalism Truth and Falsity Religious Empiricism Uncertainty and Risk F. C. S. Schiller Practical Consequences The Man-Measure Theory Pessimism and Disagreement Pragmatic Logic The Making of Truth John Dewey Pseudo-Problems Behaviorism Experience Does Science Discover Truth? Operationalism Ethical Implications No Ultimate End Do We Agree? Concluding Note Selected Bibliography The Works of Gordon H. Clark
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