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         Philosophy Modern:     more books (99)
  1. Philosophy in the Modern World: A New History of Western Philosophy, Volume 4 by Anthony Kenny, 2008-11-15
  2. Some Turns of Thought in Modern Philosophy Five Essays by George Santayana, 2009-10-04
  3. Catholic Physics: Jesuit Natural Philosophy In Early Modern Germany by Marcus Hellyer, 2005-01-15
  4. The Spirit Of Modern Philosophy by Josiah Royce, 2010-05-18
  5. Heidegger's Concept of Truth (Modern European Philosophy) (Volume 0) by Daniel O. Dahlstrom, 2009-03-19
  6. The Modern Mind: An Intellectual History of the 20th Century by Peter Watson, 2002-08-01
  7. Heidegger's Temporal Idealism (Modern European Philosophy) by William D. Blattner, 2005-10-06
  8. A History of Philosophy: Volume IX: Modern Philosophy from the French Revolution to Sartre, Camus, and Levi-Strauss by Frederick Copleston, 1994-02-01
  9. Modern Philosophy of Language
  10. German Philosophy 1760-1860: The Legacy of Idealism by Terry Pinkard, 2002-09-16
  11. A History of Philosophy, Vol. 4:Modern Philosophy From Descartes to Leibnitz by Frederick C. Copleston, 1993-12-01
  12. The Evolution of Logic (The Evolution of Modern Philosophy) by W. D. Hart, 2010-08-30
  13. French Philosophy in the Twentieth Century by Gary Gutting, 2001-05-21
  14. The Longman Standard History of Modern Philosophy by Daniel Kolak, Garrett Thomson, 2006

41. Modern Mystic! Welcome To The Modern Mystic Home Page! A Place For Independent T
Articles and personal essays on many topics including metaphysics, philosophy, politics, society, free speech, activism, and spirituality.
http://www.modern-mystic.net/
Welcome to the Modern Mystic Home Page! A place for independent thought transmition!, Literature, Metaphysics, Philosophy, Politics, Essays, Society Issues, Free Speech, Activism, Spirituality, and much more! Be what you is, and not what you is not For those who do this are of the happiest lot! Mr. Wizard Modern Mystic's Home Page is the Proud Recipient of: Esotericlinks Silver Award Use the form below to search for documents in this web containing specific words or combinations of words. The text search engine will display a weighted list of matching documents, with better matches shown first. Each list item is a link to a matching document; if the document has a title it will be shown, otherwise only the document's file name is displayed. A brief explanation of the query language is available, along with examples. Search for:
Query Language
The text search engine allows queries to be formed from arbitrary Boolean expressions containing the keywords AND, OR, and NOT, and grouped with parentheses. For example:
Abraham Lincoln
finds documents containing 'Abraham' or 'Lincoln'
Abraham or Lincoln
same as above
God and Peace
finds documents containing both 'God' and 'Peace'
God not Peace
finds documents containing 'God' but not 'Peace'
(George Washington not Franklin) and Jefferson
finds documents containing 'George Washington', plus 'Jefferson' but not 'Franklin'

42. Modern History Sourcebook: Isaac Newton: Mathematical Principles
Paul Halsall at Fordham University presents public domain educational texts, such as Newton's Mathematical Principles of Natural philosophy. modern History Sourcebook Isaac Newton The Mathematical Principles of Natural philosophy
http://www.fordham.edu/halsall/mod/newton-princ.html
Back to Modern History SourceBook
Modern History Sourcebook:
Isaac Newton:
The Mathematical Principles of Natural Philosophy
[Excerpts]
[The Rules of Reasoning in Philosophy]
RULE 1 We are to admit no more causes of natural things, than such as are both true and sufficient to explain their appearances.
To this purpose the philosophers say, that Nature does nothing in vain, and more is in vain, when less will serve; for Nature is pleased with simplicity, and affects not the pomp of superfluous causes.
RULE II Therefore to the same natural effects we must, as far as possible, assign the same causes. As to respiration in a man, and in a beast; the descent of stones in Europe and in America; the light of`our culinary fire and of the sun; the reflection of light in the earth, and in the planets
RULE III The qualities of bodies, which admit neither intension nor remission of degrees, and which are found to belong to all bodies within reach of our experiments, are to be esteemed the universal qualities of all bodies whatsoever.
RULE IV In experimental philosophy we are to look upon propositions collected by general induction from phenomena as accurately or very nearly true, notwithstanding any contrary hypotheses that may be imagined, till such time as other phenomena occur, by which they may either be made more accurate, or liable to exceptions.

43. English Books > Philosophy > Modern
Books philosophy modern Index of 1,774 Titles. Titles Commencing .A C and numbers . D - H . I - N . O -S . T - Z .
http://book.netstoreusa.com/index/bkbph600.shtml

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... Philosophy Index of 1774 Titles
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Prev Next Last page ... Abc Of Armageddon: Bertrand Russell On Science, Religion, And The Next War, 1919-1938 Denton, Peter H. Paperback; ; ISBN: 0791450740 Abc Of Armageddon: Bertrand Russell On Science, Religion, And The Next War, 1919-1938 Denton, Peter H. Hardcover; ; ISBN: 0791450732 Accursed Share, Vols. 2 And 3 Bataille, Georges Translator Hurley, Robert Hardback; Book; ; ISBN: 0942299205 Accursed Share: An Essay On General Economy Bataille, Georges Translator Hurley, Robert Paperback; ; ISBN: 0942299116 Achieving Our Humanity: The Idea Of The Postracial Future Eze, Emmanuel Chukwudi Hardback; Book; ; ISBN: 0415929407 Acquaintance With The Absolute: The Philosophy Of Yves R. Simon: Essays And Bibliography Simon, Anthony O. Schall, James V. Paperback; ; ISBN: 0823217523 Action and Reaction Starobinski, Jean Translator Hawkes, Sophie Hardback; Book; ; ISBN: 189095120X Acts Of Literature Derrida, Jacques Attridge, Derek Paperback;

44. Avineri: Hegel's Theory Of The Modern State, 5: Modern Life And Social Reality
An excerpt from chapter 5 of this work. Uses some of Hegel's littleknown early works to analyze his view of property.
http://www.marxists.org/reference/subject/philosophy/works/ot/avineri5.htm
Shlomo Avineri (1972)
Hegel's Theory of the Modern State
Source : Hegel's Theory of the Modern State, Shlomo Avineri, 1972.
5: Modern life and social reality
In the System der Sittlichkeit and the two versions of the Realphilosophie Hegel introduces for the first time his theory of what he would later call 'objective spirit', though the Realphilosophie contains also much else. Both sets of texts remained unpublished in Hegel's own lifetime. The System der Sittlichkeit, composed around 1802-3, was published in its entirety for the first time by Lasson in 1913, though an earlier incomplete version was published by Mollat in 1893. The two versions of lectures known as Realphilosophie I and II, delivered by Hegel at Jena University in 1803-4 and 1805-6 respectively, were published by Hoffmeister for the first time in the early 1930s. A careful analysis of these two sets of texts, unknown to most of Hegel's traditional commentators, shows that while Hegel's main concern was always the attempt to achieve a comprehensive system of general philosophical speculation, his preoccupation with problems of a social and political nature consistently remained as the focus of his theoretical interest. These texts also point to a remarkable continuity in his political thought and clearly show that the political philosophy of the Philosophy of Right cannot be understood in terms of a mere justification of the Restoration of 1815, since most of its themes and ideas go back to Hegel's thought during the Jena period.

45. Modern Philosophy At Erratic Impact's Philosophy Research Base
modern Philosophers philosophy Research features thousands of annotated links and text resourses for students and teachers in the field of modern philosophy including Kant, Leibniz, Spinoza, Hobbes. students and teachers in the field of modern philosophy. The modern philosophy Web serves as a study and research guide
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46. English Books > Philosophy > Modern - Renaissance Era
Books philosophy modern Renaissance Era Index of 53 Titles. AdventureOf Difference philosophy After Nietzsche And Heidegger
http://book.netstoreusa.com/index/bkbph651.shtml

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... Philosophy Index of 53 Titles
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Prev Next Last page ... Adventure Of Difference: Philosophy After Nietzsche And Heidegger Vattimo, Gianni Translator Blamires, Cyprian P. Hardcover; ; ISBN: 0801846439 After Philosophy: End Or Transformation? Baynes, Kenneth Mccarthy, Thomas Paperback; ; ISBN: 026252113X Against Postmodernism: A Marxist Critique Callinicos, Alex Paperback; ; ISBN: 0312042256 An Apology For Raymond Sebond Montaigne, Michel De Screech, M. A. Paperback; Standard Hardcover size; ; ISBN: 0140444939
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47. Bohm, Bell, And Boom! Quantum Mechanics And The End Of Modern Dualism
From History and philosophy of Science, Fall, 1997. By Dr. Ess.
http://www.drury.edu/faculty/ess/philsci/bell.html
Notes on David Peat, Einstein's Moon: Bell's Theorem and the Curious Quest for Quantum Reality History and Philosophy of Science - Fall, 1997 - Dr. Ess Outline: "Bohm, Bell - and Boom! The End of Modern Dualism" The End of Cartesian Dualism: Physics (re)discovers Philosophy over against Cartesian and especially 19th ct. positivist dualisms which separate physics and philosophy - the emergence of quantum mechanics forces physicists to be become philosophers again. Indeed, the logic of complementarity which q.m. requires ripples into a larger (re)turn to complementary relationships between physics, philosophy, and religion.
(In other terms: Cartesian dualism defines both 19th ct. positivism and fundamentalism as "mirror images" of one another: each agree that only one mode of knowing can be true - and the alternative mode(s) must be false: Positivism Fundamentalism ("calculative") reason (= natural science)
"religion" "religion"
reason/science The end of Cartesian dualism thus undermines the dualistic epistemologies of both positivism and fundamentalism.)

48. MPhil (Master Of Philosophy) Modern Languages
MPhil (Master of philosophy) School of modern Languagesat the University of Newcastle upon Tyne.
http://www.ncl.ac.uk/sml/postgrad/mphil.php
university of newcastle upon tyne / modern languages / postgraduate /
MPhil (Master of Philosophy)
1 year full time, 2 years part time The MPhil is a research degree designed for students who do not require formal training. It is entirely based upon research leading to the completion of a thesis of not more than 50,000 words, which is submitted at the end of the Summer Research Semester in the first year of study for full-time students, and in the second year of study for part-time students. An MPhil thesis is shorter and more limited in scope than a PhD thesis - the PhD thesis should show substantial evidence of original scholarship and contain material worthy of publication, or adaptation for publication. You are normally required to pass an oral examination with the external examiner(s) after presentation of your thesis. The usual route to doctoral study is via the MLitt programme . However, students who register for an MPhil degree may transfer (but are not obliged) to PhD status in the second year, conditional upon satisfactory progress.
Postgraduate University links

49. PhD (Doctor Of Philosophy) Modern Languages
PhD (Doctor of philosophy) School of modern Languagesat the University of Newcastle upon Tyne.
http://www.ncl.ac.uk/sml/postgrad/phd.php
university of newcastle upon tyne / modern languages / postgraduate /
PhD (Doctor of Philosophy)
3 years full time,5 years part time Awarded on the basis of original research presented in a thesis of not more than 100,000 words, the PhD is the classic route to an academic career, but may also have other vocational purposes. You are eligible for this programme if you have completed either an MA or an MLitt in your chosen discipline; you may also be able to register after substantial professional experience. You are normally required to pass an oral examination with the external examiner(s) after presentation of the thesis.
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50. The Pre-Kantian Modern Philosophy Witch Project - Gottfried Leibniz
Some basic notes on the structure of the Leibnizian system, presented by students at Covenant College.
http://tjaguar.tripod.com/phi202/leibniz.html
The Gottfried Leibniz Project
THE PROJECT: To show there is no logical difficulty with maintaining God's omnipotence and the presence of evil. This man put the "fried" in "Gottfried." Endeavoring to solve the Problem of Evil, Leibniz argues that this really is the best of all possible worlds. To make this work, Leibniz invents Monads. For class, we read from the Theodicy and the Monadology Theodicy: Leibniz wants to show that there's no contradicition between God being all good and all powerful, yet evil and suffering exist in the world. Admirably, he does not take the "Free Will Defense" (God chooses to not be in control of everything). Instead, he argues that it's really for the best that evil and suffering exist, even though it may not appear that way to us. Rather than set forth a thesis, Leibniz takes objections to a sovereign, good God and an evil world and answers them. The keystone of his argument is that this world, complete with evil and suffering, is the best world. There are a number of other, interesting side notes (like the fact that "good" animals may outweigh the evil of "evil" humans), but the best of all possible worlds argument is the Mac Daddy. The argument goes that evil and suffering in the world actually can produce greater good that we may not be able to perceive. A world with no evil and suffering would not be as adequate as this one. Central to the debate on this question is: Is Leibniz suggesting that God was forced to make the world this way in order for it to be "the best," or does the fact that God chose to make this world this way automatically make it "the best" regardless of how we might evaluate it with our limited understanding?

51. Modern French Philosophy
Full text of the book modern French philosophy A Study Of The Development Since Comte by J. Alexander Gunn.
http://ibiblio.org/philosophy/John_Alexander_Gunn_-_Modern_French_Philosophy/ind

52. A History Of Philosophy : Modern Philosophy : From The French Enlightenment To K
A History of philosophy modern philosophy From the French Enlightenment toKant Paperback Reprint edition Vol 6 (January 1994).
http://www.data4all.com/list/500/512000/0385470436
A History of Philosophy : Modern Philosophy : From the French Enlightenment to Kant Paperback Reprint edition Vol 6 (January 1994)
Information, reviews, pricing for A History of Philosophy : Modern Philosophy : From the French Enlightenment to Kant Paperback Reprint edition Vol 6 (January 1994)
A History of Philosophy : Modern Philosophy : Empiricism, Idealism, and Pragmatism in Britain and America
A History of Philosophy : Modern Philosophy : From Descartes to Leibniz

A History of Philosophy : Modern Philosophy : The British Philosophers from Hobbes to Hume

A History of Philosophy : Modern Philosophy : From the Post-Kantian Idealists to Marx, Kierkegaard, and Nietzsche

53. About The First Spiritual Temple
A NonDenominational Christian Church, deeply embedded within the philosophy of Spiritualism. This page is a good introduction to the works of Allan Kardec.
http://www.fst.org/kardec.htm
What is Mediumship? What is Trance Mediumship and Channeling? Why Seek Spirit Communication?: Three Part Series Helpful Hints on Consulting a Medium or Psychic ... Home Allan Kardec
Allan Kardec is considered the father of Spiritism as compared to Spiritualism in France. His real name was Hypolyte Leon Denizard Rivail. The pseudonym originated from mediumistic communications. Both the names "Allan" and "Kardec" were said to have been his names in previous incarnations. Not very much is known about Allan Kardec's early years within the Spiritualist Movement, but his impact upon the Movement is profound. He is best known for his classic, Le Livre des Esprits (The Spirits' Book), first published in 1856. Within this book is expounded a new theory of human life and destiny. According to an article by researcher, Alexander Aksakof, in The Spiritualist

54. A History Of Philosophy : Modern Philosophy : From Descartes To Leibniz Other Ed
A History of philosophy modern philosophy From Descartes to Leibniz OtherEditions Hardcover Paperback Reprint edition Vol 4 (January 1994).
http://www.data4all.com/list/500/512000/038547041X
A History of Philosophy : Modern Philosophy : From Descartes to Leibniz Other Editions: Hardcover Paperback Reprint edition Vol 4 (January 1994)
Information, reviews, pricing for A History of Philosophy : Modern Philosophy : From Descartes to Leibniz Other Editions: Hardcover Paperback Reprint edition Vol 4 (January 1994)
A History of Philosophy : Modern Philosophy : The British Philosophers from Hobbes to Hume
A History of Philosophy : Modern Philosophy : From the French Enlightenment to Kant

A History of Philosophy : Modern Philosophy : Empiricism, Idealism, and Pragmatism in Britain and America

A History of Philosophy : Modern Philosophy from the French Revolution to Sartre, Camus, and Levi-Strauss

55. Devils Guide To Modern Satanism
LaVeyan and modern Satanism, magick, chaos theory and philosophy.
http://www.geocities.com/satanlucifer666satan/index.html

56. Spinoza: The First Modern Pantheist.
Outline of pantheism in Spinoza's philosophy.
http://members.aol.com/Heraklit1/spinoza.htm

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Spinoza - the first modern pantheist
A history of pantheism by Paul Harrison.
Are you a pantheist? See the Scientific Pantheism site.
Whatsoever is, is in God, and without God nothing can be, or be conceived.
Spinoza was born in Amsterdam in 1632, into a family of Jewish emigrants fleeing persecution in Portugal. He was trained in Talmudic scholarship, but his views soon took unconventional directions which the Jewish community - fearing renewed persecution on charges of atheism - tried to discourage. Spinoza was offered 1000 florins to keep quiet about his views, but refused. At the age of 24, he was summoned before a rabbinical court, and solemnly excommunicated. Spinoza refused all rewards and honours, and gave away to his sister his share of his father's inheritance - keeping only a bedstead for himself. He earned his living as a humble lens-grinder. He died, in February 1674, of consumption, probably aggravated by fine glass dust inhaled at his workbench. His philosophy is summarized in the Ethics , a very abstract work, which openly expresses none of the love of nature that might be expected from someone who identified God with nature. And Spinoza's starting point is not nature or the cosmos, but a purely theoretical definition of God. The work then proceeds to prove its conclusions by a method modelled on geometry, through rigorous definitions, axioms, propositions and corollaries. No doubt in this way Spinoza hoped to build his philosophy on the solidest rock, but the method, as well as some of the arguments and definitions, are often unconvincing.

57. Islamic Philosophy, Modern
Islamic philosophy, modern. There are a number of major trends inmodern Islamic philosophy. First, there is the challenge of the
http://www.muslimphilosophy.com/rep/H008.htm
Islamic philosophy, modern
There are a number of major trends in modern Islamic philosophy. First, there is the challenge of the West to traditional Islamic philosophical and cultural principles and the desire to establish a form of thought which is distinctive. From the mid-nineteenth century onwards, Islamic philosophers have attempted to redefine Islamic philosophy; some, such as Hasan Hanafi and Ali Mazrui, have sought to give modern Islamic philosophy a global significance and provide an agenda for world unity. Second, there is a continuing tradition of interest in illuminationist and mystical thought, especially in Iran where the influence of Mulla Sadra and al-Suhrawardi has remained strong. The influence of the latter can be seen in the works of Henry Corbin and Seyyed Hossein Nasr; Mulla Sadra has exercised an influence over figures such as Mahdi Ha'iri Yazdi and the members of Qom School, notably Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini. The philosopher Abdul Soroush has introduced a number of concepts from Western philosophy into Iran. Finally, there have been many thinkers who have adapted and employed philosophical ideas which are originally non-Islamic as part of the normal philosophical process of seeking to understand conceptual problems. This is a particularly active area, with a number of philosophers from many parts of the Islamic world investigating the relevance to Islam of concepts such as Hegelianism and existentialism. At the same time, mystical philosophy continues to exercise an important influence. Modern Islamic philosophy is thus quite diverse, employing a wide variety of techniques and approaches to its subject.

58. Medieval Philosophy
A study of Duns Scotus, William of Ockham and other fourteenth century philosophers, and of medieval elements in Descartes and other early modern philosophers. Course notes by R.J. Kilcullen.
http://www.humanities.mq.edu.au/Ockham/medph.html
Teaching Materials on Medieval Philosophy
John Kilcullen
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Courses (no longer offered)
Course description, Medieval Philosophy Course description, Later Medieval Philosophy Website for Sydney University Course The Medieval Intellectual Tradition
Reading Guides
Medieval Philosophy: An Introduction
Greek Philosophical Background
Aristotle on the Web Macquarie Library books on Aristotle ...
Medieval elements in Berkeley, Locke and Hume

Return to Intellectual History

59. Rivendell Is Moving
Athenian philosophers, antique and medieval philosophers, rationalists, and modern philosophers, from the rivendell educational archive by Leigh Denault.
http://www.watson.org/rivendell/philosophy.html
Rivendell Educational Archive has moved its resources ...
Some of the sections have been taken offline because they no longer provide useful information, while others have been updated, expanded, and moved to separate sites.
The following sections have been moved:

60. Brock's Philosophy Page
A collection of philosophical essays on 20th century metaphysics and early modern philosophy.
http://philarete.home.mindspring.com/philosophy/index.html
Metaphysics
  • Artifacts, Matter, and Persistence I argue that artifacts are strictly identical with the masses of matter that constitute them.
  • Mereological Nihilism and the Limits of Paraphrase I argue that the mereological nihilist, one who denies that composition ever occurs, must resort to an ontology of sets in order to paraphrase away apparent reference to composite objects in everyday speech.
  • Essentialism and the Grandfather Paradox I argue that essentialism of origins implies that David Lewis's proposed solution to one of the paradoxes of time travel does not always work.
  • Williams on Personal Identity I argue that Bernard Williams' famous thought experiments on personal identity are not as decisive as some have thought.
  • Varia shorter papers, primarily expository, many written in preparation for a qualifying exam in metaphysics. I hope these papers will provide a good introduction to many of the important issues in contemporary analytic metaphysics.

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