This illuminating work explores six great thinkers of the early modern period: Descartes, Spinoza, Leibniz, Locke, Berkeley, and Hume. While not neglecting the historical setting of each, its focus is on the words they wrote. As in all of Bennett's works, it addresses philosophy as philosophy, not as museum exhibit, and it offers a close and demanding attention to textual details. For newcomers to the early modern scene, this clearly written work is an excellent introduction, and for those already in the know, it provides tools to argue with the great philosophers of the past, treating them as colleagues, antagonists, students, and teachers.
Inhaltsverzeichnis
- Volume 1
- 1: Cartesian and Aristotelian Physics
- 2: Matter and Space
- 3: Descartes's Physics
- 4: Descartes's Dualisms
- 5: Descartes on Causation
- 6: Preparing to Approach Spinoza
- 7: One Extended Substance
- 8: Explaining the Parallelism
- 9: Explanatory Rationalism
- 10: Spinoza on Belief and Error
- 11: Desire in Descartes and Spinoza
- 12: Leibniz Arrives at Monads
- 13: Causation and Perception in Leibniz
- 14: Leibniz's Physics
- 15: Harmony
- 16: Animals that Think
- 17: Leibniz'a Contained-Predicate Doctrine
- 18: Leibniz and Relations
- 19: Descartes's Search for Security
- 20: Descartes's Stability Project
- Volume 2
- 21: Lockean Ideas: Overview and Foundations
- 22: Lockean Ideas: Some Details
- 23: Knowledge of Necessity
- 24: Descartes's Theory of Modality
- 25: Secondary Qualities
- 26: Locke on Essences
- 27: Substance in Locke
- 28: Berkeley against Materialism
- 29: Berkeley's Use of Locke's Work
- 30: Berkeley on Spirits
- 31: Berkeleian Sensible Things
- 32: Hume's 'Ideas'
- 33: Hume and Belief
- 34: Some Humean Doctrine about Relations
- 35: Hume on Causation: Negative
- 36: Hume on Causation: Positive
- 37: Hume on the Existence of Bodies
- 38: Reason
- 39: Locke on Diachronic Identity-Judgements
- 40: Hume and Leibniz on Personal Identity
- Bibliography, Index of Persons, Index of Topics