Contents:
An Introduction by Catherine Wilson.
Hegel's 'Phenomenology of Spirit': An Introduction by Larry Krasnoff. Heidegger's Being and Time: An Introduction by Paul Gorner. Hume's 'A Treatise of Human Nature': An Introduction by John P. Kant's 'Critique of Pure Reason': An Introduction by Jill Vance Buroker. Kant's Groundwork of the Metaphysics of Morals: An Introduction by Sally Sedgwick. Nietzsche's 'On the Genealogy of Morality': An Introduction by Lawrence J.
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By using this service, you agree that you will only keep articles for personal use, and will not openly distribute them via Dropbox, Google Drive or other file sharing services Please confirm that you accept the terms of use. Save Search You can save your searches here and later view and run them again in "My saved searches". Relevance Title Sorted by Date. Check if you have access via personal or institutional login. Log in Register Recommend to librarian. George Berkeley's Principles of Human Knowledge is a crucial text in the history of empiricism and in the history of philosophy more generally.
Its central and seemingly astonishing claim is that the physical world cannot exist independently of the perceiving mind. The meaning of this claim, the powerful arguments in its favour, and the system in which it is embedded, are explained in a highly lucid and readable fashion and placed in their historical context.
Berkeley's philosophy is, in part, a response to the deep tensions and problems in the new philosophy of the early modern period and the reader is offered an account of this intellectual milieu. The book then follows the order and substance of the Principles whilst drawing on materials from Berkeley's other writings. This volume is the ideal introduction to Berkeley's Principles and will be of great interest to historians of philosophy in general.
If the greatness of a philosophical work can be measured by the volume and vehemence of the public response, there is little question that Rousseau's Social Contract stands out as a masterpiece.
Within a week of its publication in it was banished from France. Soon thereafter, Rousseau fled to Geneva, where he saw the book burned in public. At the same time, many of his contemporaries, such as Kant, considered Rousseau to be 'the Newton of the moral world', as he was the first philosopher to draw attention to the basic dignity of human nature.
The Social Contract has never ceased to be read and debated in the years since its publication. An Introduction offers a thorough and systematic tour of this notoriously paradoxical and challenging text. David Lay Williams offers readers a chapter-by-chapter reading of the Social Contract, squarely confronting these interpretive obstacles. The book also features a special extended appendix dedicated to outlining Rousseau's famous conception of the general will, which has been the object of controversy since the Social Contract's publication in The Crisis of the European Sciences is Husserl's last and most influential book, written in Nazi Germany where he was discriminated against as a Jew.
It incisively identifies the urgent moral and existential crises of the age and defends the relevance of philosophy at a time of both scientific progress and political barbarism. It is also a response to Heidegger, offering Husserl's own approach to the problems of human finitude, history and culture.