
Philosophy The Classic Readings
by Cooper, David E.; Fosl, Peter S.-
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Summary
Author Biography
Peter S. Fosl is Professor of Philosophy at Transylvania University. Recipient of the 2006 Acorn Award for Kentucky’s outstanding university professor of the year, Fosl is co-author with Julian Baggini of The Ethics Toolkit (2007) and The Philosopher's Toolkit (2003).He is also co-editor of the Dictionary of Literary Biography volumes on British Philosophers (2002).
Table of Contents
Introduction | |
Plato, Gorgias 482-484, 488-500 | |
Aristotle. Nicomachean Ethics Book 1; Book 10, Chapters 4-8 | |
Epicurus, 'Letter to Menoecus' and 'Leading Doctrines.' | |
Mencius, 'Human Nature is Good.' | |
'Man's Nature is Evil.' | |
The Book of Chuang Tzu Chapters 9, 13-14 | |
The Bhagavad Gita Chapters 1-5 | |
Cicero, De Finibus III: 1-10, 19-22; De officiis Book I, 1-14 | |
Marcus Aurelius, from Meditations , Book IV (abridged) | |
The Bodhicaryavatara Chapter 8 (Verses 89-140). The Second Path: Tsongkapa and Pabongka Rinpoche | |
Summa Theologica I-II Questions 55, 58, 61-63. | |
"The Way of Perfection." | |
"Oratory on the Dignity of Man." | |
Sermon 'Upon the love of our neighbour.' | |
A Treatise of Human Nature Book III Part 1 Sections 1-2. | |
Fundamental Principles of the Metaphysic of Morals Preface and Section 1. | |
Introduction to the Principles of Morals and Legislation , Chapter 1. | |
Fear and Trembling , Problema I, "Knights of Faith." | |
Utilitarianism ,Chapter 2. | |
On the Genealogy of Morals Essay I Sections 2-14, 16; Gay Science , 125 ("The Madman), 283 ("Preparatory Men"), 381 ("Eternal Recurrence). | |
Principia Ethica Chapter 1 Sections 1-2, 5-15. | |
The Right and the Good Chapter 2. | |
"The Emotive Meaning of Ethical Terms." | |
"The Myth of Sisyphus." | |
Simone de Beauvoir, The Second Sex , "Conclusion." | |
"Existentialism is a Humanism" (abridged) | |
"On Humanity in Dark Times" (abridged). | |
Discipline and Punish , (selection). | |
"'Woman' as the Subject of Feminism." | |
Epistemology | |
Introduction | |
Vasubandhu, Vimshatika (selections on anti-realism) | |
Plato, Meno 81e-85e; Republic , 475e-480a,506d-518c; Theaetetus , 200a-202d | |
Aristotle, Posterior Analytics , Book I, 1-4 & 31 and Book II, 19; De Anima , Book II, Chapters 1-6, 12; Book III, Chapters 2-8 | |
Sextus Empiricus, Outlines of Pyrrhonism , Book I, 1-16, 18-27, 34 | |
The Book of Chuang Tzu , Chapter 2 | |
The Nyaya-Sutras , from Book I, Chapter I & Book II, Chapter 1, with Vatsyayana Commentary7. Nagarjuna, Vigrahavyavartani , 5-6, 30-51 | |
Nicholas of Cusa, On Learned Ignorance ; Book I, Chapters 1-4 | |
From "Apology for Raimond Sebond."(selections on knowledge) | |
Meditations on First Philosophy I-III, Principles of Philosophy LXV, and Objections and Replies (Selections). | |
An Essay concerning Human Understanding , Book I, Chapter 2, 1-24. | |
New Essays on Human Understanding , "Preface." | |
An Enquiry Concerning Human Understanding , VII, X, XII. | |
Essays on the Intellectual Powers of Man , Essay 6, Chapter 5. | |
Critique of Pure Reason , Introduction (2nd Edition), I-VI. | |
Concluding Unscientific Postscript , "Truth is subjectivity." | |
"On truth and lies in a nonmoral sense." | |
"Some consequences of four incapacities (excerpt) and the fixation of belief." | |
The Idea of Phenomenology , Lectures 1-2. | |
"Knowledge by acquaintance and knowledge by description." | |
"On the foundation of knowledge." | |
Philosophical Investigations 60-133; On Certainty , 1-42, 91-105, 192-284. | |
Being and Time , Section 44, "Dasein, Disclosedness, and Truth." | |
"Two Dogmas of Empiricism." | |
Philosophy and the Mirror of Nature , Chapter VIII, "Philosophy without Mirrors." | |
From Of Grammatology , Chapter 1, "The End of the Book and the Beginning of Writing" (abridged). | |
Metaphysics | |
Introduction | |
Tao Te Ching , (selections) | |
Heraclitus, on logos and panta rhei3. Parmenides, selections on esti4. Plato, Phaedrus 245-50; Timaeus 27d | |
Aristotle, Metaphysics Books I, VII-VIII, XII (selected chapters) | |
Gotama (The Buddha), "Sayings On 'Conditioned Genesis'"; Lalitavistara , XIII 95-117 | |
Nagarjuna, Madhyamaka-Karika , Dedication and Chapter 25 | |
Plotinus, Fifth Enead , First Tractate | |
Vivekachudamani (selections). | |
Brahmasutrabhasya (selections). | |
(Avicenna), al-Shifa ( The Healing ), Chapters 6-7. | |
Hildegard of Bingen, Scivias , Book I | |
Ramanuja, Brahma Sutra Bhashya (selections) | |
from "De ente et essentia." | |
Ordinatio I, on the transcendentals. | |
"William of Ockham, "Commentary on the Sentences." | |
On the Infinite Universe and Worlds (selections). | |
Principles of Philosophy Part I (selections); correspondence with Princess Elisabeth. | |
Ethics Part I. | |
An Essay concerning Human Understanding Book II, Chapters 8 and 23 (1-11). | |
Monadology (selection). | |
The Principles of Human Knowledge , Part I: 1-37. | |
Critique of Pure Reason , Second Edition, "Transcendental Aesthetic," 1-3, 8. | |
Phenomenology of Spirit , Introduction (abridged). | |
The World As Will and Representation , Vol II, Chapter 21. | |
An Examination of Sir William Hamilton's Philosophy , Chapter 11. | |
Appearance and Reality , Chapters 13 and 14. | |
'The One and The Many.' | |
The Philosophy of Logical Atomism , Lecture VIII. | |
Process and Reality , Part I, Chapters1 and 2 (selections ). | |
Being and Time , 14-15, 19, 21. 65. | |
"Ontological Relativity." | |
"Différance," Margins of Philosophy Philosophy of Religion. | |
Introduction | |
Vasubandhu, Abhidharmakosabhasya (selections on the path to Enlightenment) | |
Tao Te Ching (selections on the Tao). | |
Plato, Euthyphro ; Symposium (201c-212c), "Ladder of Loves." | |
Augustine, from The Confessions (on conversion); "Of the Freedom of the Will." | |
Boethius, The Consolation of Philosophy , Book IV, Prose 6, "On Fate and Providence." | |
Anselm, Proslogion , "The Ontological Argument." | |
Al-gazali, Incoherence of the Philosophers (selections on philosophy) | |
The Decisive Treatise concerning the Nature of the Connection between Religion and Philosophy (selections on two discourses). | |
Guide of the Perplexed (on negative theology) | |
Summa theologiae I, 1, 2; (five ways, faith and reason) | |
(selections on voluntarism) | |
The Light of the Lord (selections) | |
Erasmus, In Praise of Folly (selections including "foolosophy") | |
Theodicy (selections) | |
Pascal, "The Wager." | |
A Discourse concerning Natural Religion (selections) | |
Enquiries concerning Human Understanding X, "Of Miracles"; and from Dialogues concerning Natural Religion (selections) | |
"Dialectic of Reason," (critique of cosmological and ontological argument) | |
"The Teleological Argument." | |
Fear and Trembling , Problema I, "Knights of Faith." | |
The Future of an Illusion (selections) | |
n, "Lectures on Religious Belief" (selection) | |
"A Free Man's Worship." | |
"The Will to Believe" (abridged) | |
"The Christian Argument Against Evolutionary Naturalism." | |
Political Philosophy | |
Introduction | |
Tao Te Ching (selections on the Tao and the ruler) | |
Confucius, Analects (selections on Li and the ruler) | |
"The Two Handles." | |
Xenophon, Memorabilia ; Book I, Chapters 4-8; Book IV, Chapter 4 | |
Plato, Republic Books II (origin of the state), V (three waves), VIII (degeneration of states) | |
Book of Mencius , Books I-II | |
Aristotle, Politics I, II:1-6, VII | |
Cicero, De re publica VI:ix-xxvi, "The Dream of Scipio." | |
Thomas Aquinas, Summa theologica , I-II, Questions 90-105, De regimine principum (selection on tyranny) | |
Marsilius of Padua, Defensor pacis ; Discourse I, Chapters VIII, X, and XII; Discourse II, Chapters VIII, IX | |
Machiavelli, The Prince , XIV-XIX, and XXV | |
Hobbes, Leviathan , Chapters 13-15, 18, 21 | |
Theological-Political Tractatus , Part IV, Chapter 16 and 20 | |
A Serious Proposal to the Ladies (selections) | |
Second Treatise of Government , Chapters 1-9 | |
The Social Contract (selection) | |
An Enquiry concerning the Principles of Morals III; from Essays, "Of David Hume, the Origin of Government" and "Of the Original Contract." | |
Perpetual Peace | |
"Declaration of Independence." | |
The Constitution of the United States21. James Madison, Alexander Hamilton, John Jay, The Federalist Papers , 10, 51 | |
The Declaration of the Rights of Man and the Citizen23. Edmund Burke, Reflections on the Revolution in France (selections) | |
The Rights of Man (selections) | |
Vindication of the Rights of Woman (selection) | |
Anarchical Fallacies27. John Stuart Mill, On Liberty , Chapter 5 | |
The Communist Manifesto ; Chapter 1, "Bourgeois and Proletarians"; Chapter 2, "Proletarians and Communists"; and "Theses on Feurbach." | |
"Anarchy: What it Really Stands for" | |
remarks on "Satayagraha." | |
"Declaration of Human Rights." | |
"Rationalism in Politics" (abridged) | |
A Theory of Justice , "The Original Position," "The Reasoning Leading to the Two Principles of Justice." | |
Anarchy, State, and Utopia , Chapter 7, Section 1: "Entitlement Theory"; "Historical Principles and End-Result Principles"; "Patterning"; "How Liberty Upsets Patterns." | |
"The Subject and Power." | |
"Toward Feminist Jurisprudence," Towards a Feminist Theory of the State | |
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