Problems from Philosophy is an introductory text organized around the great philosophical problemsβthe existence of God, the nature of the mind, human freedom, the limits of knowledge, and the truth about ethics. It begins by reflecting on the life of the first great philosopher, Socrates. Then it t
Problems from Philosophy: An Introductory Text
β Scribed by James Rachels, Stuart Rachels
- Publisher
- Rowman & Littlefield Education
- Year
- 2021
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 294
- Edition
- 4
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Table of Contents
Half Title
Title
Copyright
Contents
Preface
About the Fourth Edition
1 The Legacy of Socrates
1.1. Why Was Socrates Condemned?
1.2. Why Did Socrates Believe He Had to Die?
2 God and the Origin of the Universe
2.1. Is It Reasonable to Believe in God?
2.2. The Argument from Design
2.3. Evolution and Intelligent Design
2.4. The First Cause Argument
2.5. The Idea That God Is a Necessary Being
3 The Problem of Evil
3.1. Why Do Good People Suffer?
3.2. God and Evil
3.3. Free Will and Moral Character
4 Do We Survive Death?
4.1. The Idea of an Immortal Soul
4.2. Is There Any Credible Evidence of an Afterlife?
4.3. Humeβs Argument against Miracles
5 The Problem of Personal Identity
5.1. The Problem
5.2. Personhood at a Time
5.3. Personhood over Time
5.4. Bodily Continuity
5.5. Memory
6 Body and Mind
6.1. Descartes and Elizabeth
6.2. Materialist Theories of the Mind
6.3. Doubts about Materialist Theories
7 Could a Machine Think?
7.1. Brains and Computers
7.2. An Argument That Machines Could Think
7.3. The Turing Test
7.4. Why the Turing Test Fails
8 The Case against Free Will
8.1. Are People Responsible for What They Do?
8.2. Determinism
8.3. Psychology
8.4. Genes and Behavior
9 The Debate over Free Will
9.1. The Experience of Freedom
9.2. The Scientific Challenge to Free Will
9.3. Libertarianism
9.4. Compatibilism
9.5. Does It Matter if We Lack Free Will?
10 Our Knowledge of the World around Us
10.1. Vats and Demons
10.2. Idealism
10.3. What Evidence for These Views Might Be Like
10.4. Descartesβ Theological Response
10.5. Direct vs. Indirect Realism
10.6. Vision and the Brain
10.7. Conclusion
11 Ethics and Objectivity
11.1. Thrasymachusβ Challenge
11.2. Is Ethics Just a Matter of Social Conventions?
11.3. Ethics and Science
11.4. The Importance of Human Interests
12 Why Should We Be Moral?
12.1. The Ring of Gyges
12.2. Ethics and Religion
12.3. Kant on Rationality and Respect
12.4. The Social Contract
12.5. Morality and Benevolence
12.6. Conclusion
13 The Meaning of Life
13.1. The Problem of the Point of View
13.2. Happiness
13.3. Death
13.4. Religion and the Indifferent Universe
13.5. The Meaning of Particular Lives
Appendix: How to Evaluate Arguments
Notes on Sources
About the Authors
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