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PART ONE What Is Everything Really Like? |
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1 | (200) |
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1 | (1) |
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Historical Interlude A: A Worldwide Context for Western Philosophy |
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2 | (11) |
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Chapter 1 Why Philosophy? |
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13 | (41) |
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13 | (1) |
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13 | (1) |
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The Pre-Socratic Cosmologists |
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14 | (8) |
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15 | (2) |
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How Philosophy Works Worldviews |
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17 | (1) |
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18 | (2) |
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20 | (1) |
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21 | (1) |
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22 | (4) |
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How Philosophy Works Sophistic Logic, or Sophistry |
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23 | (1) |
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Doing Philosophy Shapiro for the Defense |
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24 | (2) |
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The Classical Period in Greek Philosophy |
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26 | (12) |
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26 | (2) |
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How Philosophy Works The Dialectic |
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28 | (2) |
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30 | (2) |
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Philosophers Speak For Themselves Plato |
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32 | (3) |
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35 | (1) |
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35 | (1) |
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How Philosophy Works Logic---A Method for Evaluating Arguments |
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36 | (2) |
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Metaphysics, Epistemology, and Axiology in Asian Thought |
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38 | (4) |
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38 | (3) |
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Pan Chao and the Confucian Tradition |
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41 | (1) |
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Metaphysics, Epistemology, and Axiology in African Thought |
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42 | (3) |
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The Peoples of the Americas |
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45 | (1) |
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46 | (2) |
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48 | (2) |
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50 | (1) |
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51 | (1) |
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52 | (2) |
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Chapter 2 Reality and Being |
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54 | (53) |
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Is What You See What You Get? |
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54 | (1) |
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54 | (2) |
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Reality and the Brain: The Visual World and Constructed Reality |
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56 | (2) |
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How Philosophy Works Reductio Ad Absurdum |
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57 | (1) |
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58 | (7) |
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Ontology in Plato and Aristotle |
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58 | (4) |
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How Philosophy Works The Categorical Syllogism |
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62 | (2) |
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Doing Philosophy The Riddle of the Nature of Reality |
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64 | (1) |
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65 | (4) |
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Buddhism: Reality as Interdependence |
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65 | (2) |
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Taoism: Reality as the Tao |
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67 | (2) |
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Materialism: Reality as Purely Material |
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69 | (2) |
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Pragmatism: Reality as What We Can Know |
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71 | (2) |
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Contemporary Physics and the Nature of Reality |
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73 | (6) |
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73 | (1) |
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74 | (1) |
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75 | (2) |
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Science and Physical Reality |
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77 | (1) |
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How Philosophy Works The Ship of Theseus Paradox |
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78 | (1) |
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Cosmology: Is There Order and Purpose in the Universe? |
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79 | (3) |
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79 | (1) |
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Philosophers Speak For Themselves Aristotle: The Four Causes |
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80 | (1) |
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Quantum Theory and Astronomy |
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81 | (1) |
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The Possibility of Eternal Dimensions |
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82 | (8) |
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Hypatia of Alexandria and Neoplatonism |
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82 | (2) |
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The Peoples of the Americas---Maya, Nahua, Seneca: A Sacred Cosmos |
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84 | (3) |
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An African View of a Sacred Cosmos |
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87 | (2) |
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African American Christianity and the Sacred Cosmos |
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89 | (1) |
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90 | (1) |
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91 | (2) |
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93 | (1) |
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94 | (3) |
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Historical Interlude B Philosophy and Early Christianity |
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97 | (10) |
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107 | (47) |
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Who or What Are We, and What Are We Doing Here? |
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107 | (1) |
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108 | (3) |
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111 | (1) |
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Is There an Essential Human Nature?---The Avocado View |
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112 | (9) |
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Is There an Essential Human Nature?---The Artichoke View |
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121 | (5) |
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Non-Western Views of the Self |
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126 | (11) |
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From Hinduism and Atman to Buddhism and Anatman |
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127 | (2) |
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Confucian Socially Molded Self |
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129 | (1) |
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Taoist Five-Element View of the Self |
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130 | (2) |
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Philosophers Speak For Themselves Tao Te Ching |
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132 | (2) |
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Nahua Three-Element Balance Model |
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134 | (1) |
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135 | (2) |
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137 | (5) |
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137 | (1) |
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138 | (2) |
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How Philosophy Works Inductive Reasoning |
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140 | (1) |
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Doing Philosophy Body/Mind/Bodymind |
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141 | (1) |
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Issues of Human Identity and Freedom |
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142 | (4) |
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Race and Ethnicity: One Aspect of Identity |
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142 | (2) |
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Biological Sex and Gender: Another Aspect of Identity |
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144 | (1) |
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Innate or Plastic: One Question in the Free Will versus Determinism Debate |
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145 | (1) |
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146 | (2) |
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148 | (1) |
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149 | (5) |
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Chapter 4 Philosophy and Ultimate Reality |
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154 | (47) |
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Is There an Ultimate Reality? |
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154 | (2) |
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156 | (4) |
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157 | (1) |
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158 | (1) |
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Pantheism and Panentheism |
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158 | (1) |
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159 | (1) |
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Seeking an Ultimate Reality Using Reason |
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160 | (13) |
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Knowledge of Ultimate Reality Based on Reason |
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160 | (4) |
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Imago Dei Based on Reason |
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164 | (3) |
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How Philosophy Works The Hypothetical Syllogism |
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167 | (1) |
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Philosophers Speak For Themselves Augustine |
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168 | (5) |
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Seeking an Ultimate Reality Using Intuition |
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173 | (11) |
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Knowledge of Ultimate Reality Based on Intuition |
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173 | (2) |
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Imago Dei Based on Intuition |
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175 | (9) |
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Seeking an Ultimate Reality Beyond Anthropomorphic Images |
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184 | (6) |
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Beyond Words and Concepts: Web, Tao, Teotl |
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184 | (2) |
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Is There Life After Death? |
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186 | (1) |
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The Sacred and the Secular |
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187 | (1) |
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Doing Philosophy Speculating on Life After Death |
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188 | (1) |
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Secular Humanism: Human as Ultimate |
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188 | (1) |
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Doing Philosophy Neurotheology---The Biological Basis of Spirituality |
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189 | (1) |
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Implications for Human Nature and Cosmology |
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190 | (1) |
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190 | (1) |
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Deistic, Pantheistic, and Panentheistic Worldviews |
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190 | (1) |
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191 | (1) |
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191 | (1) |
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192 | (2) |
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194 | (2) |
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196 | (5) |
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PART TWO How Am I to Understand the World? |
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201 | (120) |
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Questions of Epistemology |
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201 | (1) |
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Historical Interlude C From the Medieval to the Modern World |
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202 | (9) |
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Chapter 5 Knowledge Sources |
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211 | (39) |
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211 | (1) |
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211 | (1) |
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The Peoples of the Americas: Sor Juana Ines de la Cruz |
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212 | (1) |
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The Rationalist Approach of Rene Descartes |
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213 | (8) |
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The Use of Methodic Doubt to Examine Knowledge |
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213 | (3) |
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How Philosophy Works Methodic Doubt (Zero-Based Epistemology) |
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216 | (1) |
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Beyond Solipsism to Belief in a Material World |
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216 | (1) |
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Philosophers Speak For Themselves Rene Descartes |
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217 | (2) |
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How Philosophy Works Circular Reasoning (Begging the Question) |
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219 | (1) |
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Catholic Free Will in the "Clockwork Universe" of Science |
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219 | (1) |
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220 | (1) |
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Responses to the Mind-Body Problem |
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221 | (3) |
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Baruch (Benedictus) Spinoza |
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221 | (1) |
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Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz and Monads |
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221 | (1) |
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Anne Finch, Viscountess Conway |
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222 | (1) |
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223 | (1) |
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The New Science Leads to Empiricism: Isaac Newton |
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224 | (1) |
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224 | (8) |
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Creating a Mind-World Connection: John Locke |
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225 | (2) |
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Reality as Mind Dependent: George Berkeley |
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227 | (2) |
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Radical Skepticism: David Hume |
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229 | (3) |
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Implications of Empiricism for Philosophy |
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232 | (9) |
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Hume's Fork and Logical Positivism |
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233 | (1) |
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Language Analysis and the Limits of Philosophy |
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234 | (1) |
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Challenging the Myth of the Objective Observer |
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235 | (1) |
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Broadening the Definition of Logic in Traditional Societies |
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235 | (2) |
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How Philosophy Works Calculative Versus Meditative Thinking: Martin Heidegger |
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237 | (1) |
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Doing Philosophy Knowing How to Cure Malaria |
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238 | (1) |
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238 | (2) |
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How Philosophy Works Before and After |
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240 | (1) |
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Beyond the Egocentric Predicament: Edmund Husserl |
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240 | (1) |
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241 | (3) |
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241 | (1) |
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The Non-Western Tradition |
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242 | (2) |
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244 | (1) |
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245 | (1) |
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246 | (1) |
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247 | (3) |
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250 | (33) |
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Do You Swear to Tell the Truth...? |
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250 | (1) |
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251 | (1) |
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252 | (10) |
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252 | (1) |
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How Philosophy Works Informal Fallacies---Part One |
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253 | (2) |
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255 | (2) |
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257 | (1) |
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258 | (3) |
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261 | (1) |
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Truth and the Really Real |
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262 | (3) |
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262 | (2) |
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Truth in Religions of the Book |
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264 | (1) |
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Philosophers Speak For Themselves Hadewijch of Antwerp (a mystical vision) |
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264 | (1) |
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265 | (4) |
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266 | (1) |
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How Philosophy Works Design Thinking: Charles Sanders Peirce and Abductive Reasoning |
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266 | (2) |
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268 | (1) |
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269 | (3) |
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The Changing Definition of History |
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269 | (1) |
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Race, Class, and Gender in Historical Interpretation |
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269 | (1) |
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Research Methods of Social History |
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270 | (1) |
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271 | (1) |
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Truth in Texts: The Deconstruction Test of Truth |
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272 | (4) |
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Doing Philosophy Deconstruction: Where Do We Stop? |
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274 | (2) |
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The Elusive Nature of Truth |
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276 | (1) |
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276 | (1) |
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277 | (1) |
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277 | (1) |
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278 | (2) |
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280 | (1) |
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281 | (2) |
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Chapter 7 Aesthetic Experience |
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283 | (38) |
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Is Truth Beauty and Beauty Truth? |
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283 | (1) |
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283 | (2) |
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How Philosophy Works Informal Fallacies---Part Two |
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285 | (1) |
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Functions of Art in Society |
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285 | (9) |
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Art as Representation of Reality |
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285 | (2) |
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The Role of the Artist in Western Society |
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287 | (1) |
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Philosophers Speak For Themselves Plato and Aristotle |
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287 | (2) |
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The Role of the Artist in Asian Society |
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289 | (4) |
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The Role of the Artist in African Society |
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293 | (1) |
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294 | (1) |
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294 | (1) |
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295 | (4) |
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Truth and Beauty in the West |
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295 | (2) |
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297 | (2) |
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Truth and Beauty in Western Philosophy |
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299 | (9) |
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Overcoming the Subject-Object Split: Friedrich Wilhelm Joseph von Schelling |
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300 | (2) |
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Escaping the Force of Will: Arthur Schopenhauer |
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302 | (2) |
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Combining the Merging of Dionysus and the Separation of Apollo: Friedrich Nietzsche |
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304 | (2) |
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Viewing Truth as Unconcealment: Martin Heidegger |
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306 | (2) |
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Art as a Vehicle for Experiencing the World Differently |
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308 | (6) |
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Doing Philosophy Music and the Mind |
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309 | (1) |
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310 | (1) |
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310 | (1) |
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311 | (1) |
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312 | (1) |
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313 | (1) |
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314 | (1) |
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315 | (1) |
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316 | (1) |
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317 | (4) |
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PART THREE By What Values Shall I Live in the World? |
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321 | (158) |
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321 | (1) |
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Historical Interlude D From the Modern to the Postmodern World |
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322 | (8) |
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Chapter 8 Political Philosophy |
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330 | (38) |
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330 | (1) |
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330 | (2) |
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Theories of the Right to Rule |
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332 | (13) |
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The Philosopher-King: Plato |
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333 | (2) |
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How Philosophy Works The Hypothetical Chain Argument |
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335 | (1) |
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Natural Law: The Stoics, Aristotle, and Thomas Aquinas |
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335 | (3) |
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338 | (1) |
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Doing Philosophy The Fuzzy Social Contract |
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339 | (1) |
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Philosophers Speak For Themselves John Locke |
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340 | (3) |
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Doing Philosophy Thomas Jefferson's Declaration of Independence |
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343 | (2) |
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Natural Rights and Feminism |
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345 | (4) |
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Gender Equality: Mary Wollstonecraft |
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345 | (1) |
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"Declaration of Sentiments": Elizabeth Cady Stanton |
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346 | (1) |
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The Struggle for Suffrage: Susan B. Anthony |
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347 | (2) |
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349 | (7) |
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The Absolute: Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel |
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349 | (3) |
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The Mandate of Heaven: Rule in China |
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352 | (2) |
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354 | (2) |
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Sovereignty and Citizenship: (Re)Negotiating the Social Contract |
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356 | (3) |
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Personhood and Citizenship |
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356 | (1) |
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Political Order and Sovereignty |
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357 | (2) |
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359 | (4) |
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Liberalism and Conservatism |
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360 | (2) |
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American Constitutional Theory and Civil Rights |
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362 | (1) |
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363 | (1) |
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364 | (1) |
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365 | (1) |
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366 | (2) |
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Chapter 9 Social Philosophy |
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368 | (51) |
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Am I My Brother's or My Sister's Keeper? |
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368 | (1) |
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368 | (2) |
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Classical Theories of Justice |
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370 | (3) |
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Justice in the Polis: Plato |
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371 | (1) |
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Molding Citizens for Society: Aristotle |
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372 | (1) |
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Utilitarianism as a Measure of Justice |
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373 | (5) |
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374 | (1) |
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375 | (2) |
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377 | (1) |
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Justice Expressed as Fairness |
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378 | (8) |
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The Alienation of Workers: Karl Marx |
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379 | (1) |
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The Equal Liberty and Difference Principles: John Rawls |
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380 | (3) |
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The Theory of Entitlement: Robert Nozick |
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383 | (1) |
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384 | (1) |
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Justice in a Planned City: Columbia, Maryland |
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385 | (1) |
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African American Social Philosophy |
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386 | (6) |
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Assimilation or Separatism? |
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386 | (1) |
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The Dilemma of Being Both an African and an American: W. E. B. Du Bois |
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387 | (1) |
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How Philosophy Works The Disjunctive Syllogism |
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388 | (1) |
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The Nineteenth-Century Debate: Martin Delany and Frederick Douglass |
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389 | (2) |
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A Twentieth-Century Approach: Cornel West, Malcolm X, and Martin Luther King Jr. |
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391 | (1) |
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Mexican American Social Philosophy |
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392 | (5) |
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Cesar Chavez and the United Farm Workers |
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392 | (3) |
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Doing Philosophy Cesar Chavez: An Open Letter to the Grape Industry |
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395 | (1) |
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Rodolfo "Corky" Gonzales and La Raza Unida |
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396 | (1) |
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Feminist Social Philosophy |
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397 | (4) |
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Woman as "Other": Simone de Beauvoir |
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398 | (1) |
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Philosophers Speak For Themselves Mary Wollstonecraft |
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399 | (1) |
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An Approach to Economic Independence: Charlotte Perkins Oilman |
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400 | (1) |
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Women Redefining Difference: Audre Lorde |
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401 | (1) |
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War and Its Justifications |
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401 | (5) |
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Christian Just War Theory |
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402 | (1) |
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403 | (1) |
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403 | (1) |
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404 | (2) |
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406 | (3) |
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Human Rights in a Communitarian Perspective: Ignacio Ellacuria, S.J. |
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406 | (1) |
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The Ethics of Authenticity: Charles Taylor |
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407 | (1) |
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Communitarianism in Africa |
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408 | (1) |
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Cosmopolitanism: The Ultimate in Communitarianism |
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409 | (1) |
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409 | (2) |
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411 | (2) |
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413 | (1) |
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414 | (5) |
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419 | (60) |
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What Will It Be: Truth or Consequences? |
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419 | (2) |
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421 | (1) |
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422 | (12) |
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Consequentialist, or Teleological, Ethical Theories |
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423 | (1) |
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Nonconsequentialist, or Deontological, Ethical Theories |
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423 | (2) |
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Philosophers Speak For Themselves Immanuel Kant |
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425 | (1) |
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426 | (1) |
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How Philosophy Works Fuzzy Logic |
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427 | (2) |
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429 | (2) |
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Virtue Ethics: Ancient and Modern |
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431 | (3) |
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Asian and African Ethical Theories |
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434 | (5) |
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435 | (2) |
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437 | (2) |
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The Question of Human Freedom: How Much Do We Have? |
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439 | (7) |
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440 | (1) |
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Existentialism: A Radical Concept of Freedom |
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441 | (2) |
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443 | (1) |
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Radical Evil and the Question of Punishment |
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444 | (1) |
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445 | (1) |
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The Question of Human Freedom: How Much Should We Have? |
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446 | (9) |
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The Human Genome Project, Cloning, and In Vitro Fertilization |
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447 | (2) |
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Maternal Obligations to Fetuses |
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449 | (1) |
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Our Obligations to One Another |
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450 | (1) |
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451 | (2) |
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453 | (1) |
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Doing Philosophy The Great Ape Project |
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454 | (1) |
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Environmental Ethics: Healing the Greek Division |
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455 | (4) |
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456 | (2) |
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458 | (1) |
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459 | (2) |
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461 | (2) |
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463 | (1) |
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464 | (4) |
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Historical Interlude E A Revolution in Philosophy? |
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468 | (11) |
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A Few Final Words About Philosophy |
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479 | (4) |
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Glossary |
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483 | (6) |
Index |
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489 | |