The Philosophers : Their Lives and the Nature of their Thought: Their Lives and the Nature of their Thought |
Contents
Persuasion | 1 |
to Persuasion Persuasion of Others as SelfPersuasion l | 16 |
Mathematics The Truth Is Certain but Vague Relevance | 33 |
Leadership and Discipleship Subcultural Unity | 42 |
Creation | 80 |
Childhood and Reality | 108 |
Descartes to Rousseau | 123 |
Kant to Schopenhauer | 209 |
Mill to Sartre | 259 |
Philosophers in General | 345 |
Paradoxical Consciousness | 361 |
Questions and Conclusions | 380 |
Acknowledgements | 396 |
Index | 437 |
Common terms and phrases
A. A. Luce ambivalence answer atomism Autobiography basic become believe Berkeley Bertrand Russell BIOGRAPHY chap child childhood David Hume death Descartes difficult disciples emotional Essays Ethics everything existence experience explain express father fear feeling felt G. E. M. Anscombe Hegel human Hume Husserl hypochondria Ibid ideas imagine Immanuel Kant intellectual interest John Locke John Stuart Mill Kant Kant's Kierkegaard later learned Leibniz letter live Locke logic London Ludwig Wittgenstein Malebranche mathematics means metaphysical Mill mind Montaigne moral mother nature never Nietzsche Nietzsche's objective Oeuvres Oxford University Press pain parents Paris Pascal passion Paul Rée perhaps person philosopher's philosophers pleasure problems psychoanalysis psychological question reason relevance Rousseau Russell Russell's Santayana Sartre says Schopenhauer Schopenhauer's Schriften seems sense sister speak Spinoza suffering suicide things thought trans truth understand Voltaire wanted Werke words writes wrote York