<p>to that goal, and it is hoped that it will incorporate further works dealing in an exact way with interesting philosophical issues. ZΓΌrich, April 1973 Mario Bunge From the Preface to the First Edition It may seem odd that aseries of works devoted to the natural sciences should indude - indeed beg
General theory of knowledge
β Scribed by Schlick, Moritz
- Publisher
- Springer-Verlag
- Year
- 1974
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 437
- Series
- Library of exact philosophy 11.
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Table of Contents
I. The Nature of Knowledge.- 1. The Meaning of the Theory of Knowledge.- 2. Knowing in Everyday Life.- 3. Knowing in Science.- 4. Knowing by Means of Images.- 5. Knowing by Means of Concepts.- 6. The Limits of Definition.- 7. Implicit Definitions.- 8. The Nature of Judgments.- 9. Judging and Knowing.- 10. What is Truth?.- 11. Definitions, Conventions and Empirical Judgments.- 12. What Knowledge is Not.- 13. On the Value of Knowledge.- II. Problems of Thought.- 14. The Interconnectedness of Knowledge.- 15. The Analytic Character of Rigorous Inference.- 16. A Skeptical Consideration of Analysis.- 17. The Unity of Consciousness.- 18. The Relationship of the Psychological to the Logical.- 19. On Self-Evidence.- 20. So-Called Inner Perception.- 21. Verification.- III. Problems of Reality.- A. The Positing of the Real.- 22. Formulating the Question.- 23. Naive and Philosophical Viewpoints on the Question of Reality.- 24. The Temporality of the Real.- 25. Things-In-Themselves and the Notion of Immanence.- 26. Critique of the Notion of Immanence.- a) Unperceived Objects.- 1. Unperceived Things as Real.- 2. Unperceived Things as Unreal.- b) Objects Perceived by Several Individuals.- B. Knowledge of the Real.- 27. Essence and "Appearance".- 28. The Subjectivity of Time.- 29. The Subjectivity of Space.- 30. The Subjectivity of the Sense Qualities.- 31. Quantitative and Qualitative Knowledge.- 32. The Physical and the Mental.- 33. More on the Psychophysical Problem.- 34. Objections to Parallelism.- 35. Monism, Dualism, Pluralism.- C. The Validity of Knowledge of Reality.- 36. Thinking and Being.- 37. Knowing and Being.- 38. Is There a Pure Intuition?.- 39. Are There Pure Forms of Thought?.- 40. On Categories.- 41. On Inductive Knowledge.- Index of Names.
β¦ Subjects
Knowledge, Theory of;Connaissance, TheΜorie de la
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