History of Philosophy: Descartes to LeibnizDiscusses Descartes, Pascal, Malebranche, Spinoza and Leibniz. Deals with the great rationalist systems of philosophy in Europe in the preKantian period. + |
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Page v
... freedom - Freedom and God - Provisional ethics and moral science - The passions and their control - The nature of the good - Comments on Descartes ' ethical ideas- General remarks about Descartes . VII . PASCAL . Life and spirit of ...
... freedom - Freedom and God - Provisional ethics and moral science - The passions and their control - The nature of the good - Comments on Descartes ' ethical ideas- General remarks about Descartes . VII . PASCAL . Life and spirit of ...
Page vi
... freedom - The intellectual love of God - The ' eternity ' of the human mind - An inconsistency in Spinoza's ethics . XIV . SPINOZA ( 5 ) Natural right - The foundation of political society - Sovereignty and government - Relations ...
... freedom - The intellectual love of God - The ' eternity ' of the human mind - An inconsistency in Spinoza's ethics . XIV . SPINOZA ( 5 ) Natural right - The foundation of political society - Sovereignty and government - Relations ...
Page 11
... freedom with the determinism demanded by his system . Among the British philosophers we find a marked interest in psychological questions . The leading empiricists , Locke , Berkeley and Hume , all deal with problems about knowledge ...
... freedom with the determinism demanded by his system . Among the British philosophers we find a marked interest in psychological questions . The leading empiricists , Locke , Berkeley and Hume , all deal with problems about knowledge ...
Page 12
... freedom will be denied . Descartes was convinced of the truth of the first answer , though he spoke of mind rather than of soul . The material world can be described in terms of matter , identified with geometrical exten- sion , and ...
... freedom will be denied . Descartes was convinced of the truth of the first answer , though he spoke of mind rather than of soul . The material world can be described in terms of matter , identified with geometrical exten- sion , and ...
Page 13
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Contents
DESCARTES 1 | 63 |
DESCARTES 2 | 90 |
DESCARTES 3 | 116 |
DESCARTES 4 | 124 |
DESCARTES 5 | 139 |
PASCAL | 153 |
LEIBNIZ | 159 |
CARTESIANISM | 174 |
SPINOZA 2 | 214 |
SPINOZA 3 | 230 |
SPINOZA 4 | 238 |
SPINOZA 5 | 252 |
LEIBNIZ 1 | 264 |
LEIBNIZ 2 | 273 |
LEIBNIZ 3 | 295 |
from eternal truthsThe argument from truths of factThe | 320 |
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Common terms and phrases
according analytic propositions assert atheist attribute believe body British empiricism Cartesianism causality cause certainly Christian clear and distinct clearly and distinctly Cogito conceive contingent corporeal substance deduction Descartes Discourse on Method distinct ideas divine doubt eighteenth century emotions empiricism Enlightenment ergo sum essence eternal ethics example existential propositions experience extension follow freedom geometrical God's existence Hobbes human Ibid infinite influence innate ideas intuition Kant knowledge Leibniz logical Malebranche material things mathematics matter means mediaeval Meditation metaphysical method mind modes Monadology monads monism moral Natura naturata nature necessary notion object ontological argument Pascal perceive perception perfect philosophy physics possess possible predicate principle priori prop propositions rationalist reality Scholasticism sense simply soul speak Spinoza spirit sufficient reason Theodicy theological theory thinkers thought tion true truths of fact truths of reason understand word writings