Oxford Studies in Early Modern Philosophy presents a selection of the best current work in the history of early modern philosophy. It focuses on the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries--the extraordinary period of intellectual flourishing that begins, very roughly, with Descartes and his contemporaries and ends with Kant.
Inhaltsverzeichnis
- 1: Vlad Alexandrescu: What Someone May Have Whispered in Elisabeth's Ear
- 2: John Russell Roberts: Whichcote and the Cambridge Platonists on Human Nature: An Interpretation and Defense
- 3: Yitzhak Y. Melamed: Spinoza's Deification of Existence
- 4: Mogens Lærke: Leibniz on Spinoza's Political Philosophy
- 5: Stephen Puryear: Motion in Leibniz's Middle Years: A Compatibilist Approach
- 6: Massimo Mugnai: Leibniz's Ontology of Relations: A Last Word?
- 7: Shane Duarte: Leibniz and Monadic Domination
- 8: Stewart Duncan: Toland, Leibniz, and Active Matter
- 9: J. E. McGuire and Edward Slowik: Newton's Ontology of Omnipresence and Infinite Space
- 10: Louis E. Loeb: Epistemological Commitment in Hume's Treatise
- 11: Tad M. Schmalz: Review Essay: Descartes on Forms and Mechanisms, by Helen Hattab, and Descartes's Changing Mind, by Peter Machamer and J. E. McGuire
- Index of Names
- Notes to Contributors