A History of Philosophy: Maine de Biran to Sartre


Book Description

Prominent French philosophical thinkers of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. +










A History of Philosophy


Book Description




A history of philosophy


Book Description







History of Philosophy


Book Description

In this second volume of my history of philosophy I had originally hoped to give an account of the development of philosophy throughout the whole period of the Middle Ages, understanding by medieval philosophy and philosophic thought and systems which were elaborated between the Carolingian renaissance in the last part of the eight century A.S. and the end of the fourteenth century.




Language, Culture and Cognition from Descartes to Lewes


Book Description

The monograph tells a different story on the history of modern philosophy: the narrative is no longer centred on the question whether knowledge results from experience or reason, but whether experience and reason are in fact possible without language.




A history of philosophy


Book Description

The Fourteenth Century -- Rise of the Schools of the Renaissance. Culminates with the revival of Scholasticism.




A History of Philosophy in the Twentieth Century


Book Description

In A History of Philosophy in the Twentieth Century, Christian Delacampagne reviews the discipline's divergent and dramatic course and shows that its greatest figures, even the most unworldly among them, were deeply affected by events of their time. From Ludwig Wittgenstein, whose famous Tractatus was actually composed in the trenches during World War I, to Edmund Husserl and Martin Heidegger—one who found himself barred from public life with Hitler's coming to power, the other a member of the Nazi party who later refused to repudiate German war crimes. From Bertrand Russell, whose lifelong pacifism led him to turn from logic and mathematics to social and moral questions, and Jean-Paul Sartre, who made philosophy an occasion for direct and personal political engagement, to Rudolf Carnap, a committed socialist, and Karl Popper, a resolute opponent of Communism. From the Vienna Circle and the Frankfurt School to the contemporary work of philosophers as variously minded as Jacques Derrida, Jürgen Habermas, and Hilary Putnam. The thinking of these philosophers, and scores of others, cannot be understood without being placed in the context of the times in which they lived.