1st Edition

Short History W Philosoph

By Johannes Hirschberger Copyright 1977
    230 Pages
    by Routledge

    230 Pages
    by Routledge

    A study of the historical development of philosophy both requires and stimulates intellectual detachment. The person who limits himself to the present can easily fall a prey to passing fashions; he becomes a slave of the latest -ism. Intellectually rootless and inexperienced, he succombs to something that may exercise considerable attraction at this particular moment, but that soon withers and passes. For example, Ernst Haeckel's theories once exercised an enormous fascination on all sorts of people; they were even hailed as the definitive word in philosophy. Nowadays they are more likely to cause amusement than anything else. The same may be said of Nietzsche's philosophy, or materialism, or vitalism, or idealism.

    Part One: The Philosophy of Antiquity; Chapter One: The Pre-Socratics; Chapter Two: Attic Philosophy; Chapter Three: The Philosophy of Hellenism and the Roman Empire; Part Two: The Philosophy of the Middle Ages; Chapter One: Patristic Philosophy; Chapter Two: Scholastic Philosophy; Part Three: The Philosophy of Modern Times; Chapter One: The Renaissance; Chapter Two: The Great Systems of the Seventeenth and Eighteenth Centuries; Chapter Three: Kant and German Idealism; Part Four: The Philosophy of the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries; Chapter One: From the Nineteenth to the Twentieth Century; Chapter Two: Twentieth Century Philosophy

    Biography

    Hirschberger, Johannes