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Classic Philosophical Questions Robert Mulvaney

Classic Philosophical Questions By Robert Mulvaney

Classic Philosophical Questions by Robert Mulvaney


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Classic Philosophical Questions Summary

Classic Philosophical Questions by Robert Mulvaney

Classic and Contemporary Primary Source Readings. Classic Philosophical Questions has presented decades of students with the most compelling classic and contemporary primary source readings on the most enduring and abiding questions in philosophy. Classic Philosophical Questions is a longstanding and highly respected anthology of basic readings in philosophy, taken from ancient, modern, and contemporary sources. Issues are treated in a fundamentally open manner with arguments pro and con for the various positions covered. All selections are taken from primary sources, with introductions and study guides to facilitate reading for the beginning student.

Table of Contents

IN THIS SECTION: 1.) BRIEF 2.) COMPREHENSIVE BRIEF TABLE OF CONTENTS: Part 1: Socrates and the Nature of Philosophy Part 2: Philosophy of Religion Part 3: Ethics Part 4: Knowledge Part 5: Metaphysics Part 6: Social and Political Philosophy Part 7: Aesthetics Part 8: Philosophy and the Good Life COMPREHENSIVE TABLE OF CONTENTS: Part 1: Socrates and the Nature of Philosophy What is Philosophy? The Euthyphro: Defining Philosophical Terms The Apology: Socrates' Trial and Defense The Crito: Socrates' Refusal to Escape The Phaedo: Virtue and Socrates' View of Death Part 2: Philosophy of Religion Can We Prove That God Exists? St. Anselm: The Ontological Argument St. Thomas Aquinas: The Cosmological Argument William Paley: The Teleological Argument Blaise Pascal: It is Better to Believe in God's Existence Than to Deny it. Does the Idea of a Good God Exclude Evil? Boethius: God Can Allow Some Evil. David Hume: A Good God Would Exclude Evil. John Hick: Evil, Human Freedom and Moral Development Part 3: Ethics Are Ethics Relative? Ruth Benedict: Ethics Are Relative W. T. Stace: Ethics Are Not Relative Are Humans Always Selfish? Humans Are Always Selfish: Glaucon's Challenge to Socrates James Rachels: Humans Are Not Always Selfish Which is Basic in Ethics: Happiness or Obligation? Aristotle: Happiness Is Living Virtuously Jeremy Bentham: Happiness Is Seeking the Greatest Pleasure for the Greatest Number of People Immanuel Kant: Duty Is Prior to Happiness Friedrich Nietzsche: Happiness Is Having Power Jean-Paul Sartre: Existentialist Ethics Virginia Held: Feminist Ethics Are Different Part 4: Knowledge What is Knowledge? Plato: Knowledge Is Warranted True Belief What Method is Best For Acquiring Knowledge? Charles Sanders Peirce: Four Approaches to Philosophy How Do We Acquire Knowledge? Rene Descartes: Knowledge Is Not Ultimately Sense Knowledge John Locke: Knowledge is Ultimately Sensed Immanuel Kant: Knowledge Is Both Rational and Empirical. How Is Truth Established? Bertrand Russell: Truth Is Established By Correspondence Brand Blanshard: Truth Means Coherence William James: Truth Is Established by Pragmatic Means Can We Know the Nature of Causal Relations? David Hume: Cause Means Regular Association David Hume: There Are No Possible Grounds for Induction Part 5: Metaphysics Why Is There Something Rather Than Nothing? Parmenides: Being Is Uncaused Lao-Tzu: Non-Being Is the Source of Being Is Reality General Or Particular? Plato: Universals Are Real David Hume: Particulars Are Real Of What Does Reality Consist? Rene Descartes: Reality Consists of Mind and Matter Paul Churchland: Reality Consists of Matter George Berkeley: Reality Consists of Ideas John Dewey: Reality Consists of Mental and Physical Qualities Are Humans Free? Holbach: Humans Are Determined John Stuart Mill: Determinism and Freedom Are Compatible Richard Taylor: Humans Are Free Do Humans Have an Identical Self? John Locke: Humans Beings Have an Identical Self David Hume: Human Beings Have No Identical Self Is There Life After Death? Plato: The Soul is Immortal and Imperishable Joseph Butler: Human Beings Survive Death David Hume: Life After Death Is Philosophically Unprovable Part 6: Social and Political Philosophy What is Liberty? Fyodor Dostoevski: Liberty and Authority John Stuart Mill: Liberty is Independence from the Majority's Tyranny Martin Luther King Jr.: Liberty and Racial Prejudice Simone de Beauvoir: Women's Liberation. Which Government is Best? Thomas Hobbes: Monarchy Is Best John Locke: Democracy Is Best Karl Marx: Communism and Nonalienated Labor Is Best Benjamin Barber: 'Strong Democracy' Is Best Part 7: Aesthetics What Constitutes The Experience of Beauty? Plotinus: Beauty, Sensuous and Ideal What is the Function of Art? Aristotle: The Nature of Tragedy Henri Bergson: The Nature of Comedy Part 8: Philosophy and the Good Life Two Classic Views of the Good Life Epicurus and the Pleasant Life Epictetus and the Life of Self-Control What Gives Life Meaning? Leo Tolstoy: Faith Provides Life's Meaning Albert Camus: Life's Meaning Is Determined by Each Individual What Is the Value Of Philosophy? Bertrand Russell: The Value of Philosophy to Individual Life. John Dewey: The Value of Philosophy to Society Glossary

Additional information

CIN0205096808A
9780205096800
0205096808
Classic Philosophical Questions by Robert Mulvaney
Used - Well Read
Paperback
Pearson Education (US)
2011-11-15
552
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Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
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