The Oxford companion to philosophy
Bookreader Item Preview
Share or Embed This Item
- Publication date
- 1995
- Topics
- Philosophy, Philosophers, Filosofie, Philosophie, Philosophy
- Publisher
- Oxford ; New York : Oxford University Press
- Collection
- internetarchivebooks; printdisabled
- Contributor
- Internet Archive
- Language
- English
- Item Size
- 2.1G
Includes bibliographical references and index
Philosophy can be intriguing--and at times baffling. It deals with the central problems of the human condition--with important questions of free will, morality, life after death, the limits of logic and reason--though often in rather esoteric terms. Now, in The Oxford Companion to Philosophy, readers have the most authoritative and engaging one-volume reference work on philosophy available, offering clear and reliable guidance to the ideas of all notable philosophers from antiquity to the present day, and to the major philosophical systems around the globe, from Confucianism to phenomenology.Here is indeed a world of thought, with entries on idealism and empiricism, ethics and aesthetics, epicureanism and stoicism, deism and pantheism, liberalism and conservativism, logical positivism and existentialism--over two thousand entries in all. The contributors represent a veritable who's who of modern philosophy, including such eminent figures as Isaiah Berlin, Sissela Bok, Ronald Dworkin, John Searle, Michael Walzer, and W. V. Quine. We read Paul Feyerabend on the history of the philosophy of science, Peter Singer on Hegel, Anthony Kenny on Frege, and Anthony Quinton on philosophy itself. We meet the great thinkers--from Aristotle and Plato, to Augustine and Aquinas, to Descartes and Kant, to Nietzsche and Schopenhauer, right up to contemporary thinkers such as Richard Rorty, Jacques Derrida, Luce Iragaray, and Noam Chomsky (over 150 living philosophers are profiled). There are short entries on key concepts such as personal identity and the mind-body problem, major doctrines from utilitarianism to Marxism, schools of thought such as the Heidelberg School or the Vienna Circle, and contentious public issues such as abortion, capital punishment, and welfare. In addition, the book offers short explanations of philosophical terms (qualia, supervenience, iff), puzzles (the Achilles paradox, the prisoner's dilemma), and curiosities (the philosopher's stone, slime). Almost every entry is accompanied by suggestions for further reading, and the book includes both a chronological chart of the history of philosophy and a gallery of portraits of eighty eminent philosophers, from Pythagoras and Confucius to Rudolf Carnap and G.E. Moore. And finally, as in all Oxford Companions, the contributors also explore lighter or more curious aspects of the subject, such as "Deaths of Philosophers" (quite a few were executed, including Socrates, Boethius, Giordano Bruno, and Thomas More) or "Nothing so Absurd" (referring to Cicero's remark that "There is nothing so absurd but some philosopher has said it"). Thus the Companion is both informative and a pleasure to browse in, providing quick answers to any question, and much intriguing reading for a Sunday afternoon.An indispensable guide and a constant source of stimulation and enlightenment, The Oxford Companion to Philosophy with appeal to everyone interested in abstract thought, the eternal questions, and the foundations of human understanding
Philosophy can be intriguing--and at times baffling. It deals with the central problems of the human condition--with important questions of free will, morality, life after death, the limits of logic and reason--though often in rather esoteric terms. Now, in The Oxford Companion to Philosophy, readers have the most authoritative and engaging one-volume reference work on philosophy available, offering clear and reliable guidance to the ideas of all notable philosophers from antiquity to the present day, and to the major philosophical systems around the globe, from Confucianism to phenomenology.Here is indeed a world of thought, with entries on idealism and empiricism, ethics and aesthetics, epicureanism and stoicism, deism and pantheism, liberalism and conservativism, logical positivism and existentialism--over two thousand entries in all. The contributors represent a veritable who's who of modern philosophy, including such eminent figures as Isaiah Berlin, Sissela Bok, Ronald Dworkin, John Searle, Michael Walzer, and W. V. Quine. We read Paul Feyerabend on the history of the philosophy of science, Peter Singer on Hegel, Anthony Kenny on Frege, and Anthony Quinton on philosophy itself. We meet the great thinkers--from Aristotle and Plato, to Augustine and Aquinas, to Descartes and Kant, to Nietzsche and Schopenhauer, right up to contemporary thinkers such as Richard Rorty, Jacques Derrida, Luce Iragaray, and Noam Chomsky (over 150 living philosophers are profiled). There are short entries on key concepts such as personal identity and the mind-body problem, major doctrines from utilitarianism to Marxism, schools of thought such as the Heidelberg School or the Vienna Circle, and contentious public issues such as abortion, capital punishment, and welfare. In addition, the book offers short explanations of philosophical terms (qualia, supervenience, iff), puzzles (the Achilles paradox, the prisoner's dilemma), and curiosities (the philosopher's stone, slime). Almost every entry is accompanied by suggestions for further reading, and the book includes both a chronological chart of the history of philosophy and a gallery of portraits of eighty eminent philosophers, from Pythagoras and Confucius to Rudolf Carnap and G.E. Moore. And finally, as in all Oxford Companions, the contributors also explore lighter or more curious aspects of the subject, such as "Deaths of Philosophers" (quite a few were executed, including Socrates, Boethius, Giordano Bruno, and Thomas More) or "Nothing so Absurd" (referring to Cicero's remark that "There is nothing so absurd but some philosopher has said it"). Thus the Companion is both informative and a pleasure to browse in, providing quick answers to any question, and much intriguing reading for a Sunday afternoon.An indispensable guide and a constant source of stimulation and enlightenment, The Oxford Companion to Philosophy with appeal to everyone interested in abstract thought, the eternal questions, and the foundations of human understanding
- Access-restricted-item
- true
- Addeddate
- 2010-02-24 20:42:33
- Boxid
- IA108903
- Boxid_2
- CH100601
- Camera
- Canon EOS 5D Mark II
- City
- Oxford
- Containerid_2
- X0001
- Donor
- alibris
- Edition
- 1. publ.
- External-identifier
-
urn:oclc:record:1036777854
urn:lcp:oxfordcompaniont00hond:lcpdf:cc88618a-d76f-4300-8558-f7d697cf2276
urn:lcp:oxfordcompaniont00hond:epub:32a62ec1-cc1b-4977-957c-cbaab2b3cfba
- Extramarc
- Princeton University Library
- Foldoutcount
- 0
- Identifier
- oxfordcompaniont00hond
- Identifier-ark
- ark:/13960/t71v6jf49
- Isbn
-
0198661320
9780198661320
- Lccn
- 94036914
- Noindex
- true
- Ocr
- ABBYY FineReader 8.0
- Ocr_converted
- abbyy-to-hocr 1.1.7
- Ocr_module_version
- 0.0.13
- Openlibrary_edition
- OL1111121M
- Openlibrary_work
- OL16053209W
- Page-progression
- lr
- Page_number_confidence
- 100
- Page_number_module_version
- 1.0.5
- Pages
- 1048
- Pdf_module_version
- 0.0.20
- Ppi
- 514
- Related-external-id
-
urn:isbn:8371507186
urn:oclc:830303452
urn:oclc:47213615
urn:oclc:749265446
urn:isbn:0585182639
urn:oclc:318421957
urn:oclc:44961767
urn:oclc:645596171
urn:oclc:649217808
urn:oclc:758932412
urn:oclc:77355290
urn:oclc:833264714
urn:isbn:0191532657
urn:oclc:437109003
urn:oclc:455978823
urn:oclc:613373930
urn:oclc:62563098
urn:isbn:0199264791
urn:lccn:2005275452
urn:lccn:94036914
urn:lccn:57283356
urn:oclc:173262485
urn:oclc:180031201
urn:oclc:232002249
urn:oclc:316527496
urn:oclc:426036106
urn:oclc:433820025
urn:oclc:441592554
urn:oclc:474699428
urn:oclc:491715696
urn:oclc:57283356
urn:oclc:671170284
urn:oclc:711058102
urn:oclc:738541237
urn:oclc:752330378
urn:oclc:771248566
urn:oclc:783313861
urn:oclc:803243307
urn:oclc:803433610
urn:oclc:828741111
urn:oclc:830240046
urn:oclc:846051325
urn:oclc:848942917
urn:oclc:856591600
urn:oclc:874283423
urn:oclc:66588198
urn:isbn:1281345857
urn:isbn:8371504136
urn:oclc:830988545
urn:oclc:749258817
urn:isbn:1570855722
urn:oclc:58726839
urn:oclc:314166877
urn:oclc:783376800
urn:isbn:1570856427
urn:oclc:377762399
urn:oclc:827881295
urn:isbn:0191727474
urn:oclc:840006171
- Scandate
- 20111208174026
- Scanner
- scribe10.shenzhen.archive.org
- Scanningcenter
- shenzhen
- Source
- removedNEL
- Worldcat (source edition)
- 186405504
- Full catalog record
- MARCXML
comment
Reviews
(1)
Reviewer:
Archilocus
-
February 8, 2019
Subject: revelación del conocimiento y la retensión de él
Subject: revelación del conocimiento y la retensión de él
aunque no es muy normal expresar tal cual el pensamiento sintético bajo las condiciones de lo que nos delimita el contexto temático de cómo anunciar
...
o hacer atractivo un tema al momento de presentarlo...
no se expresa entonces una explicación consistentes y creo menos aun que parece se deja esto a la reserva del comprahabiente y así el sentimiento de necesidad se divide en dos, por una parte el secreto se develará; al menos así se creía, a los que tienen la posibilidad. Ahora pero qué pasa entonces con quien necesita saberlo por el autentico interés.
¿es este un derecho propio o ajeno?
no se expresa entonces una explicación consistentes y creo menos aun que parece se deja esto a la reserva del comprahabiente y así el sentimiento de necesidad se divide en dos, por una parte el secreto se develará; al menos así se creía, a los que tienen la posibilidad. Ahora pero qué pasa entonces con quien necesita saberlo por el autentico interés.
¿es este un derecho propio o ajeno?
There is 1 review for this item. .
1,398 Views
19 Favorites
Purchase options
DOWNLOAD OPTIONS
No suitable files to display here.
IN COLLECTIONS
Internet Archive BooksUploaded by AltheaB on