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Problems of Philosophy


About the Series

This series addresses the central problems of philosophy. Each book gives a fresh account of a particular theme by offering two perspectives on the subject: the historical context and the author's own distinct and original contribution.
The books are written to be accessible to students of philosophy and related disciplines, while taking the debate to a new level.
Other recent titles in the Proplems of Philosophy series:
Social Reality
Hb: 0-415-14796-4: £40.00
Pb: 0-415-14797-2: £12.99
Substance
Hb: 0-415-11250-8: £42.50
Pb: 0-415-14032-3: £14.99
Utilitarianism
Hb: 0-415-09527-1: £40.00
Pb: 0-415-12197-3: £12.99
Vagueness
Pb: 0-415-13980-5: £15.99

24 Series Titles

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Civic Republicanism

Civic Republicanism

1st Edition

By Iseult Honohan
October 18, 2002

Civic Republicanism is a valuable critical introduction to one of the most important topics in political philosophy. In this book, Iseult Honohan presents an authoritative and accessible account of civic republicanism, its origins and its problems. The book examines all the central themes of this ...

Perception

Perception

1st Edition

By Howard Robinson
February 23, 2001

Questions about perception remain some of the most difficult and insoluble in both epistemology and in the philosophy of mind. This controversial but highly accessible introduction to the area explores the philosophical importance of those questions by re-examining what had until recent times been ...

The Moral Self

The Moral Self

1st Edition

By Pauline Chazan
May 14, 1998

The Moral Self addresses the question of how morality enters into our lives. Pauline Chazan draws upon psychology, r ral philosophy and literary interpretation to rebut the view that morality's role is to limit desire and control self-love. Perserving the ancients' connection between what is good ...

Democracy

Democracy

1st Edition

By Ross Harrison
December 21, 1995

Democracy surrounds us like the air we breath, and is normally taken very much for granted. Across the world democracy has become accepted as an unquestionably good thing. Yet upon further examination the merits of democracy are both paradoxical and problematic, and the treasured values of liberty ...

The Mind and its World

The Mind and its World

1st Edition

By Gregory McCulloch
June 13, 1995

First published in 1995. Since Descartes, the mind has been thought to be `in the head', separable from the world and even from the body it inhabits. Gregory McCulloch, in The MInd and its World, considers the latest debates in philosophy and cognitive science about whether the thinking subject ...

Substance Its Nature and Existence

Substance: Its Nature and Existence

1st Edition

By Joshua Hoffman, Gary Rosenkrantz
February 12, 1997

Substance has been a leading idea in the history of Western philosophy. Joshua Hoffman and Gary S. Rosenkrantz explain the nature and existence of individual substances, including both living things and inanimate objects. Specifically written for students new to this important and often complex ...

Utilitarianism

Utilitarianism

1st Edition

By Geoffrey Scarre
January 31, 2002

Surveying the historical development and the present condition of utilitarian ethics, Geoffrey Scarre examines the major philosophers from Lao Tzu in the fifth century BC to Richard Hare in the twentieth. Utilitarianism traces the 'doctrine of utility' from the moralists of the ancient world, ...

Time

Time

1st Edition

By Phillip Turetzky
June 24, 1998

Time offers a comprehensive history of the philosophy of time in western philosophy from the Greeks through to the twentieth century.In the first half of the book, Philip Turetzky explores theories in ancient and modern philosophy chronologically: from Aristotle to Nietzsche. In the latter half, ...

Vagueness

Vagueness

1st Edition

By Timothy Williamson
May 07, 1996

If you keep removing single grains of sand from a heap, when is it no longer a heap? From discussions of the heap paradox in classical Greece, to modern formal approaches like fuzzy logic, Timothy Williamson traces the history of the problem of vagueness. He argues that standard logic and formal ...

Other Minds

Other Minds

1st Edition

By Anita Avramides
January 16, 2001

How do we know whether there are other minds besides our own? The problem of other minds raises many questions which are at the root of all philosophical investigations - how it is we know, what is the mind and can we be certain about any of our beliefs?In this compelling analysis of 'other minds'...

Logic and Language Indian Philosophy

Logic and Language: Indian Philosophy

1st Edition

Edited By Roy W. Perrett
December 27, 2000

First published in 2001. The five volumes of this series collect together some of the most significant modern contributions to the study of Indian philosophy. Volume 2: Logic and Philosophy of Language is concerned with those parts of Indian pramd-a theory that Western philosophers would count as ...

Utilitarianism

Utilitarianism

1st Edition

By Geoffrey Scarre
June 26, 1996

Surveying the historical development and the present condition of utilitarian ethics, Geoffrey Scarre examines the major philosophers from Lao Tzu in the fifth century BC to Richard Hare in the twentieth. Utilitarianism traces the 'doctrine of utility' from the moralists of the ancient world, ...

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