Modern philosophy : the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries /

This introductory text for students gives a thematic survey of the ideas of the major philosophers of the 17th and 18th centuries. Topics include Perception And Ideas, Matter And Motion, Necessity And Freedom, And Minds and persons.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Francks, Richard
Format: Electronic eBook
Language:English
Published: London : Routledge, 2003.
Series:Fundamentals of philosophy (London, England)
Subjects:
Online Access:CONNECT
Table of Contents:
  • Introduction: How modern is 'Modern' philosophy?
  • Rene Descartes
  • Material Monism or the Great Soup of Being: Descartes' account of the natural world
  • The possibility of atheism: Descartes and God
  • The limits of mechanism: the place of human beings in Descartes' world
  • Selling the picture: Descartes' story of doubt and discovery
  • Baruch Spinoza
  • God, or Nature? Spinoza's pantheism
  • The attribute of thought
  • Spinoza's ethics: metaphysics and the life of man
  • Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz
  • The Principle of Sufficient Reason
  • The best of all possible worlds
  • The world as explicable: Monadology
  • Matter, mind and human life: the world as monadic
  • John Locke
  • On living in the world: Locke on the contents of the mind
  • Locke on nature (and our knowledge of it)
  • The life of man: Locke's political thought
  • George Berkeley
  • Denying the obvious: Berkeley's radical reinterpretation of human experience
  • Berkeley's disproof of the existence of matter
  • David Hume
  • Hume's project for a new science: what it is, how it works, and an example
  • The failure of the project
  • The lessons of Hume: where do we go from here?