PRZEDMIOTEM OFERTY JEST KOD DOSTĘPOWY DO KSIĄŻKI ELEKTRONICZNEJ (EBOOK)
KSIĄŻKA JEST DOSTĘPNA NA ZEWNĘTRZNEJ PLATFORMIE. KSIĄŻKA NIE JEST W POSTACI PLIKU.
Reissuing works originally published between 1937 and 1992, this collection of original texts addresses the philosophical realm of metaphysics, not only ontology but the philosophy of science, religion and morals. The theory of values and the theory of absolutes are the subject of more than one volume, while others take a broader spectrum and outlay the history of the philosophical arguments. The nature of objects and questions of being and identity are addressed from very different perspectives. With some volumes by very eminent thinkers, this is a great addition to any collection on philosophy.
- Autorzy: Various Authors
- Wydawnictwo: Taylor & Francis
- Data wydania: 2013
- Wydanie: 1
- Liczba stron:
- Forma publikacji: PDF (online)
- Język publikacji: angielski
- ISBN: 9780429577925
BRAK MOŻLIWOŚCI POBRANIA PLIKU. Drukowanie: OGRANICZENIE DO 2 stron. Kopiowanie: OGRANICZENIE DO 2 stron.
- Volume 01
- Cover
- Half Title
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Original Title Page
- Original Copyright Page
- Dedication
- Preface
- Table of Contents
- Chapter I-III: Three Lectures on Absolute-Theory:
- I: The Notion of an Absolute
- II: The Absolute and Philosophical Problems
- III: The Absolute and Rational Eschatology
- Chapter IV: The Teaching of Meaning
- Chapter V: Some Reflections on Necessary Existence
- Chapter VI: Freedom and Value
- Chapter VII: Metaphysics and Affinity
- Chapter VIII: Hegel's Use of Teleology
- Chapter IX: The Diremptive Tendencies of Western Philosophy
- Chapter X: The Logic of Mysticism
- Chapter XI: Essential Probabilities
- Chapter XII: The Logic of Ultimates
- Chapter XIII: The Systematic Unity of Value
- Chapter XIV: Intentional Inexistence
- Chapter XV: Towards a Neo-neo-Platonism
- Index
- Volume 02
- Cover
- Half Title
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Original Title Page
- Original Copyright Page
- Table of Contents
- Preface
- Chapter I: Subject and Object
- Chapter II: Structure and Process: Objective
- Chapter III: Structure and Process: Subjective
- Chapter IV: Appearance and Reality
- Chapter V: The Self and the World
- Chapter VI: Value: Subjective and Objective
- Chapter VIII: Value and Willcontinued
- Chapter IX: Truth
- Chapter X: Beauty
- Chapter XI: Moral Values
- Chapter XII: Conclusion
- Index
- Volume 03
- Cover
- Half Title
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Original Title Page
- Original Copyright Page
- Table of Contents
- Chapter I: The Discovery of the World: Timeless Being
- The nature of classification
- Plato's two realms
- The world versus the universe
- The one over the many
- Chapter II: The Battle Over the World: Universals
- Porphyry, Boethius, and the Medievals
- The localization problem
- Property instances
- Abstraction
- Chapter III: The Structure of the World: The Categories
- Categories
- Structures
- Relations
- Sets
- Numbers
- Facts
- The category of the world
- Necessity
- Chapter IV: The Substratum of the World: Existence
- Modes of being
- Existence conceived of as a property
- Existence conceived of as self-identity
- Existence conceived of as a property of properties
- Attempts to define existence
- The nature of existence
- The variable object
- Negative existentials
- Chapter V: The Enigma of the World: Negation
- Much to do about nothingness
- Non-being
- Acquaintance with negative facts
- The nature of negation
- Bibliography
- Index
- Volume 04
- Cover
- Half Title
- Title page
- Copyright page
- Original Title page
- Original Copyright page
- Dedication
- Table of Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Opening Conversation
- Introduction The Gift and the Art
- Chapter 1: The Historical Call to Our Hearing
- Part I: Narcissism: The Ego's Rise to Power
- Part II: Nihilism and the Closure of Metaphysics
- Part III: The Metaphysics of Presence
- Part IV: The Western Vision of Reason: Questioning the Enlightenment
- Part V: Communicative Ethics: A New Model of Rationality
- Part VI: Social Change: The Potential in Perception and Sensibility
- Part VII: Developing our Capacities: Listening as a Practice of the Self
- Part VIII: The Listening Self: Four Stages of Self-Development
- Part IX: Humanism Today
- Chapter 2: Zugehörigkeit: Our Primordial Attunement
- Chapter 3: Everydayness: The Ego's World
- Chapter 4: Skilful Listening
- Chapter 5: Communicative Praxis
- Part I: The Body Politic
- Part II: States of Deafness: Listening for the Excluded Voices
- Part III: The Conscience of Listening: The Self as Intersubjectivity
- Part IV: Needs and their Interpretation: Listening to Inner Nature
- Part V: Sounds of Truth
- Part VI: In the Depth of the Flesh: the Body Politic as Corporeal Image
- 1: The Narcissism of the Flesh
- 2: Freud: Primary and Secondary Narcissism
- 3: Lacan: The Mirror and the Self
- 4: Merleau-Ponty: Narcissism as Self-Deconstruction
- 5: The Intertwining and its Reversibilities: A Radical Political Order
- 6: A Sense of Justice
- Part VII: Consensus and Difference
- Chapter 6: Hearkening: Hearing Moved by Ontological Understanding
- Part I: The Ontological Appropriation of Hearing
- Part II: Our Natal Bonding
- Part III: Feminine Archetypes: Earth, Plants, Body, Feeling, Intertwining
- Part IV: Gelassenheit: Just Listening
- Part V: The Echo and the Ego
- Part VI: The Principle of the Ground: Setting the Double Tone
- Part VII: The Gathering of the Logos
- Part VIII: The Fourfold: A Gathering of Sound
- Part IX: Time and the Echo: A Gathering of Time
- Part X: Belonging to Culture: A Gathering of History
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Index
- Volume 05
- Cover
- Half Title
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Original Title Page
- Original Copyright Page
- Table of Contents
- Preface and acknowledgements
- Chapter I: Existential proofs
- 1: Introduction
- 2: Existential proofs
- 3: Metaphysical categories
- Chapter II: Criteria of identity and the natures of objects
- 1: What is a criterion of identity?
- 2: The significance issue again
- Chapter III: Some theories of events
- 1: Introduction
- 2: Events as explicanda
- 3: Events as almost spatio-temporal particulars
- 4: Events as causes and effects
- Chapter IV: Change
- 1: Introduction
- 2: The Ancient Criterion of Change
- 3: Survival
- 4: Persistence is not a change
- 5: Coming and going
- 6: What's the matter with substantial change?
- 7: Relational change
- 8: Static and other properties
- 9: Does anything ever change?
- Chapter V: Events and changes
- 1: Change in a respect
- 2: Quality spaces
- 3: The subject and spatial location of an event
- 4: The temporal features of events
- Chapter VI: Events as changes
- 1: Spatio-temporal sameness
- 2: Refining the picture
- 3: Descriptions of events
- 4: Kinds of events
- 5: A Criterion of identity for events
- 6: Disputes about event identities
- Chapter VII: Events and their essences
- 1: Introduction
- 2: The inessentiality of causes and effects
- 3: The Subjects of events
- 4: The essentiality of time
- Chapter VIII: The supervenience of events
- 1: Individual essences
- 2: Co-variance
- 3: Dependence
- 4: The possibility of reduction
- 5: Concluding speculations
- Appendix: Some lingering issues
- 1: The existence of events
- 2: Towards a theory of event-composition
- 3: Subjectless events
- Notes
- Index
- Volume 06
- Cover
- Half Title
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Original Title Page
- Original Copyright Page
- Table of Contents
- Dedication
- Preface and Acknowledgments
- Part I: Substance
- Introduction: The four problems of substance
- Chapter 1: Individuation
- Substance and qualities
- Ordinal properties
- Positional properties
- The elimination of singular terms
- The identity of indiscernibles
- Position as substance
- Chapter 2: Things
- Theories of reference
- Existence and indication
- The general idea of a thing
- Matter and extension
- Nouns and adjectives
- Chapter 3: Identity
- Identity and the necessity of continuants
- Substance as identifier
- Spatial continuity
- The mutual dependence of things and places
- Non-temporal identity
- Chapter 4: Ultimates
- Eternal things
- Atoms and infinity
- Personal identity
- Ownership and the subject of experience
- Two conceptions of personality
- Part II: Knowledge
- Introduction: Knowledge as a system
- Chapter 5: Intuition
- The regress of justification
- The concept of intuition
- Ostensive statements
- Innate ideas
- Basic statements
- The correspondence theory
- Chapter 6: Certainty
- The concept of certainty
- Scepticism and fallibilism
- Two arguments for certainty
- Incorrigibility and language
- The falsification of sense-statements
- Chapter 7: Perception
- Theories of perception
- Illusions and appearances
- Certainty and inference
- Science and perception: space-gap and time-gap
- Secondary qualities and the fine structure of matter
- Chapter 8: Coherence
- Against foundations
- The coherence theory
- Peirce on intuition and inquiry
- Popper's theory of knowledge
- Part III: Ideas
- Introduction: Metaphysics
- Chapter 9: Essence
- Abstract reference
- Universals
- Nominalism
- Natural classes
- Necessary truth
- Tautologies and convention
- Logical truths
- Chapter 10: Theory
- The nature of science
- Positivism and realism
- Critique of positivism
- Observability
- Causal connections
- Chapter 11: Mind
- Dualism
- Problems of dualism
- Behaviourism
- Materialism
- The mind and space
- Consciousness
- Chapter 12: Value
- Fact, value and antinaturalism
- The practicality of value
- Refutation of noncognitivism
- Action, value and desire
- The nature of morality
- Bibliography
- Index
- Volume 07
- Cover
- Half Title
- Title page
- Copyright page
- Original Title Page
- Original Copyright Page
- Table of Contents
- Dedication
- Preface
- Introduction
- Part I: The Approach to Metaphysics through the Theory of Perception
- Chapter I: The Object of Our Thinking
- Chapter II: Foundations of a Theory of Perception
- Chapter III: The Limitations of Perception
- Part II: The Nature of Metaphysical Thought
- Chapter I: Metaphysics and Civilisation
- Chapter II: The Origins of European Civilisation
- Part III: The Metaphysical Background of Modern Thought
- Chapter I: The Rationalist Attack on Scepticism
- Chapter II: The Empiricist Attack on Scepticism and Kant's Answer
- Chapter III: Kant and the Problem of the Thing-in-Itself
- Chapter IV: Hegel and the Rise of the Historical Consciousness
- Part IV: The Present Situation
- Conclusion
- Index
- Volume 08
- Cover
- Half Title
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Original Title Page
- Original Copyright Page
- Dedication
- Table of Contents
- Preface
- Chapter 1: Introduction
- Chapter 2: The Philosophy of Plato
- Chapter 3: Metaphysics as News from Nowhere
- Chapter 4: Materialism and Aristotelianism
- Chapter 5: Metaphysics without Ontology
- Chapter 6: The Limits of Reason: Descartes and Cogito ergo sum
- Chapter 7: The Limits of Reason: Hume and Causality
- Chapter 8: Contemporary Anti-metaphysics
- Chapter 9: The Origins of Hegelianism
- Chapter 10: Metaphysical Assertion and Metaphysical Argument
- Chapter 11: True and False in Metaphysics
- Chapter 12: Metaphysics and Analysis
- Bibliographical Note
- Index
- Volume 09
- Cover
- Half Title
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Original Title Page
- Original Copyright Page
- Table of Contents
- Introduction
- Part I: Systems of Metaphysics
- Chapter 1: Plato
- Chapter 2: Aristotle
- Chapter 3: Berkeley
- Chapter 4: Leibniz
- Chapter 5: Bradley
- Part II: Rejections of Metaphysics
- Chapter 6: Kant
- Chapter 7: Verificationism
- Chapter 8: Wittgenstein
- Part III: Rehabilitations of Metaphysics
- Chapter 9: Collingwood
- Chapter 10: Wisdom
- Chapter 11: Lazerowitz
- Chapter 12: Conclusion
- Index
- Volume 10
- Cover
- Half Title
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Original Title Page
- Original Copyright Page
- Preface
- Table of Contents
- Glossary
- Chapter I: Introduction
- Popular Philosophy and Academic Philosoph
- Unanswerable Questions
- Philosophy and Science
- Logic
- Ethics, Aesthetics
- Metaphysics
- Rationalists and Empiricists
- The Scope of Metaphysics
- Idealism and Materialism
- Chapter II: Materialism
- Materialism and the Scientific Outlook
- The Unity of the Word
- Atomism
- Mechanism
- Determinism
- The Principle of Indeterminacy
- The Essential Properties of Matter
- Chapter III: Epiphenomenalism
- What is the Place of Mind in a Material World ?
- Difference between Mental and Physical Properties
- Problem of "Secondary Qualities "
- Epiphenomenalism
- Argument from the Continuity of Nature
- Criticism of this Argument
- Argument that a Non-Physical Cause cannot have Physical Effects
- Criticism of this Argument
- Chapter IV: Mind and Brain
- Parallels between Mind and Brain
- Conclusions from these Parallels
- Have we Direct Awareness of the Influence of Mind in Matter?
- Mind and Brain, the Epiphenomenalist Theory
- Reflex Action
- Complexity of Unconscious Bodily Activity
- The "Unconscious Mind"
- Unity of Mind and Body
- Materialism and Human Dignity
- Determinism and Fatalism
- Conclusions; All Mental Process is Also Physical
- What about Telepathy?
- And Spiritualism?
- Conscious Processes do have Physical Effects
- Chapter V: Berkeley's Criticism of Materialism
- What Idealism Is
- Idealism and Common Sense
- How do we Know that there are Material Things? The Common sense Answer
- Its Difficulties
- Sense-data
- The Scientific Answer
- Its Difficulties
- Locke's Representative Theory of Perception
- Criticisms of Locke's Theory
- Chapter VI: Phenomenalism
- The Non-existence of Matter
- The Meaning of Word
- Phenomenalism
- Its Advantages
- Criticisms of Phenomenalism
- "Appearance" ard "Reality"
- The Permanence of Material Things
- Phenomenalist Analysis of Permanence
- Berkley's Accountof Permanence
- Causal Activity
- Phenomenalist Analysis of Causation
- Knowledge of Other Minds
- Other Minds: the Phenomenalist Theory
- Other Minds: Berkdey's Theory
- Chapter VII: Phenomenalism Examined
- The Relation between Sense-data and Material Things
- The Paradoxes of Phenomenalism
- Source of the Paradoxes: The Nature of Sense-exprrience
- Qualities of Sense-data and Qualities of Matter
- What Do We Know about Material Things?
- The Definition of Matter
- Chapter VIII: Idealism
- Is Idealism Self-evidently True?
- Is it Self-evidently False?
- What does Idealism Imply?
- Is there a Purpose in Nature?
- Chapter IX: The Existence of GodThe Cosmological Argument
- Arguments for the Existence of God
- The Ontological Argument
- Argument from the Intelligibility of the Universe
- The Cosmological Argument
- The Argument as Stated by Aquinas
- Analysis of the Argument
- Criticism of the Argument
- A "Fist Cause" is not God
- Chapter X: The Existence of God: The Argument from Design
- The Argument from Design
- Evidence from the Structure of Living Things
- Purposes Transcending the Individual
- Evolutionary Progress
- The Mechanist View of Living Things
- Its Inadequacy
- Darwin's Theory of Natural Selection
- What Darwinism Leaves Unexplained: Variation
- The Existence of Living Things
- Summing-up
- Chapter XI: Theism and the "Problem of Evil"
- God as the Designer of the World
- The Design is Imperfect
- No Unity of Purpose in Nature
- The Argument that Evil is Nothing Real
- The Argument that Evil is Only Apparent
- The Argument that Evil is Due to Sin
- Chapter XII: The Evidence of Religious Experience
- Religious Experience
- Is it an Illusion?
- Practical Value of Religious Experiennce
- Its Theoretical Claims
- The World as a Spiritual Unity
- "Transcendence "
- "Immanence"
- Can Many Minds Make Up One Mind?
- Relation between Soul and Body
- God as the Soul of the World
- Chapter XIII: Conclusions
- Index
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