History of Modern Thought: The English, Irish and Scotch SchoolsFordham University Press, 1933 - 188 páginas This little book which is a sequel to "Cartesianism" is not written for professional philosophers. Its less ambitious purpose is to initiate undergraduate students of Catholic Universities and Colleges, who are engaged in the study of scholastic philosophy, into a knowledge of the fundamental principles of those numerous systems that have contributed to the chaos of modern thought from the time of Descartes to the present day. |
Contenido
INTRODUCTION | 7 |
Lockes Philosophical System | 48 |
Lockes Idea of Substance | 62 |
Derechos de autor | |
Otras 6 secciones no mostradas
Términos y frases comunes
according to Locke actually existing admit Agnosticism Aristotle asserts Atheism Berkeley Berkeley's bodies CALIFORNIA LIBRARY Cartesianism cognitive faculties colonial America consciousness declares Deism derived Descartes directly doctrine element Emmanuel Kant Empiricism England English essence Euphranor existing objects experience explain explicitly external objects external senses George Berkeley Hence human knowledge human mind Hume idea of cause idea of substance Idealism Idealist ideas of reflection ideas of sensation imagination immediate objects independent innate ideas intellectual intuitive knowledge John Locke judgments Kant Kant's knowl Leibnitz Locke's ideas logically Malebranche matter means modern thought nature necessity and universality never notion noumenon object of sense operations origin osophy Pantheism passage passive perceived perception percipi phenomena phil philosophy principle priori forms Protestantism psychical Puritanism qualities real existence Realism reason Scholasticism sense-experience sense-faculties Sensism sensuous ideas simple ideas soul spirit subjective ideas theory things tion truth understanding UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA