A Continental Guide to Philosophy
What is real? How can we know what is real? How might we live authentically? These are the three fundamental questions about metaphysics, epistemology, and ethics. John Macready guides you through these questions by reading three pairs of philosophers and texts. Part I, Metaphysics: Plato's Sophist and Descartes's Meditations on First Philosophy. Part II, Epistemology: Hume's An Enquiry Concerning Human Understanding and Kant's Prolegomena to Any Future Metaphysics. Part III: Ethics: Nietzsche's ‘Schopenhauer as Educator’ and Arendt's ‘Labor, Work, and Action’. Each chapter introduces you to basic philosophical problems, concepts, and methods of philosophical inquiry. You'll learn how to read and understand these key texts so that you can answer these three questions for yourself.

1138997014
A Continental Guide to Philosophy
What is real? How can we know what is real? How might we live authentically? These are the three fundamental questions about metaphysics, epistemology, and ethics. John Macready guides you through these questions by reading three pairs of philosophers and texts. Part I, Metaphysics: Plato's Sophist and Descartes's Meditations on First Philosophy. Part II, Epistemology: Hume's An Enquiry Concerning Human Understanding and Kant's Prolegomena to Any Future Metaphysics. Part III: Ethics: Nietzsche's ‘Schopenhauer as Educator’ and Arendt's ‘Labor, Work, and Action’. Each chapter introduces you to basic philosophical problems, concepts, and methods of philosophical inquiry. You'll learn how to read and understand these key texts so that you can answer these three questions for yourself.

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A Continental Guide to Philosophy

A Continental Guide to Philosophy

by John Douglas Macready
A Continental Guide to Philosophy

A Continental Guide to Philosophy

by John Douglas Macready

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$120.00 
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Overview

What is real? How can we know what is real? How might we live authentically? These are the three fundamental questions about metaphysics, epistemology, and ethics. John Macready guides you through these questions by reading three pairs of philosophers and texts. Part I, Metaphysics: Plato's Sophist and Descartes's Meditations on First Philosophy. Part II, Epistemology: Hume's An Enquiry Concerning Human Understanding and Kant's Prolegomena to Any Future Metaphysics. Part III: Ethics: Nietzsche's ‘Schopenhauer as Educator’ and Arendt's ‘Labor, Work, and Action’. Each chapter introduces you to basic philosophical problems, concepts, and methods of philosophical inquiry. You'll learn how to read and understand these key texts so that you can answer these three questions for yourself.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781474486774
Publisher: Edinburgh University Press
Publication date: 01/13/2022
Pages: 216
Product dimensions: 5.43(w) x 8.50(h) x (d)

About the Author

John Douglas Macready is Professor of Philosophy at Collin College in Plano, Texas. His work focuses on critical issues in ethics and social and political philosophy. He is the author of Hannah Arendt and the Fragility of Human Dignity (Lexington Books, 2018).

Table of Contents

GlossaryTimeline

Introduction

  1. Three Basic Questions
  2. A Continental Tour of Philosophy
  3. How to Use this Book
  4. How to Read Philosophical Texts

Part I: Metaphysics. What is real? Plato and Descartes

1. Plato: The Hunt for the Real

  1. The Aim of Philosophy
  2. Being and Appearance and the Problem of Difference
  3. The Vermeer Forgeries
  4. The Problem of Identity and Difference
  5. How to Give an Account of the Real
  6. Only Forms are Real
  7. The Hunt for a Slippery Beast

2. Plato: The Net of Language

  1. The Problem of Being
  2. The Problem of Language
  3. Imitation and Knowledge
  4. The Hunt for Being: Four Views
  5. The Five Kinds

3. Descartes: Mind and Reality

  1. The Meditations are Spiritual Exercises
  2. The Substance of Reality
  3. Meditation 1: Doubting Reality
  4. Meditation 2: The Reality of Me
  5. Meditation 3: The Reality of God

4. Descartes: Truth and World

  1. Meditation 4: Judgment and Truth
  2. Meditation 5: God, Things, and Ideas
  3. Meditation 6: The Reality of the World

Part II: Epistemology. How can we know what is real? Hume and Kant

5. Hume: The Mind is an Assemblage of Ideas

  1. A Conceptual Revolution
  2. Hume’s Clash with Rationalism
  3. A New Kind of Philosophy
  4. Hume’s Atomism and Associationism
  5. The Cartesian Ego vs the Assemblage of the Self
  6. Innate Ideas vs Copies of Impressions
  7. Knowledge vs Belief
  8. The Fragile Connection between Cause and Effect

6. Hume: Skepticism and Truth

  1. Probability and Belief
  2. The Illusion of Connection
  3. Are We Free or Determined?
  4. Should We Believe in God or Miracles?
  5. Skepticism as Philosophical Therapy
  6. Hume and the Idea of Race

7. Kant: The Architecture of the Mind

  1. Hume’s Problem and Kant’s Awakening
  2. Critical Philosophy
  3. Knowledge and Judgments
  4. Mathematical Judgments are Synthetic A Priori Judgments
  5. Natural Science Judgments are Synthetic A Priori Judgments

8. Kant: Virtual Reality and the Limits of Reason

  1. The Problem of Reality and Appearances
  2. The Threefold Synthesis
  3. Reason and the Three Dialectical Illusions
  4. Metaphysical Judgments are Synthetic A Priori

Part III: Ethics. How might we live Authentically? Nietzsche and Arendt

9. Nietzsche: Become Who You Are!

  1. How to Know Yourself
  2. Three Exemplary Qualities of an Authentic Life
  3. The Dangers of an Authentic Life

10. Nietzsche: The Creative Life

  1. Modern Culture is Dehumanizing
  2. How to Become a Child
  3. Modern Culture is Egotistic and Tyrannical
  4. Three Images of Creative Spirits
  5. The Meaning of Life is to Contribute to Culture
  6. The Two Sacraments of Culture
  7. Beware of the Four Enemies of Culture

11. Arendt: Think What We Are Doing!

  1. The Prejudice of Philosophy and Worldlessness
  2. The Recovery of the Public World
  3. The Two Ways of Life
  4. The Pre-Philosophic View of the Active Life
  5. The Philosophical View: Political Action as Work
  6. The Modern View: Political Action as Labor

12. Arendt: The Political Life

  1. Labor is Natural and Necessary
  2. Labor is Not Work
  3. Work Makes the World
  4. Action Reveals Who We Are
  5. Behavior vs. Action

Conclusion: Philosophy for Life

Suggestions for Further ReadingBibliographyIndex

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