YALE UNIVERISTY
DECLARATIONS OF THE RIGHTS OF MAN
INTELLECTUALS GATHERING AT THE CAFE D'ALEXANDRE, P…
THE STROMING OF THE BASTIEEL
RULED BY THE HEART
A LADY AT HER MIRROR, JEAN RAOUX (1720s)
Knowledge of the External World
IN THE EYE OF THE BEHOLDER
ABOVE AND BEYOND
Representation and Reality
Man's Oneness with Nature
Hegel
Revolution in Europe
KARL MARX
POLARIZATION OF THE CLASSES
SHACKLED BY VALUE SYSTESM
FRIEDRICH NIETZSCHE
Checking the Facts
EXISTENTIAL ANGST
LIVING TO THE FULL
THE DANCING PHILOSOPHER
A UNIQUE LOCATION IN SPACE AND TIME
SILENT THOUGHTS AND FEELINGS
VERIFIABLE STATEMENTS
THE POWER OF BELIEF
TO DO IS TO KNOW
VOTES FOR WOMEN
NATURE'S LEADERS
William James
"From 1905 to 1907 in a Nutshell
W I L L
Morality is practical metaphysics ~ Schopehbauer
Language
Determinism
Temple of Philosophy
Naturphilosophie
Richard Wagner in 1842, from the Portrait by E. Ki…
VOILA D'AMORE
Benedict Spinoza
FREEDOM OF EXPRESSION
LEIBNIZ WITH QUEEN SOPHIA CHARLOTTE OF PRUSSIA
THE PICTURE THEORY OF MEANING
QUEEN CHRISTINA OF SWEDEN & DESCARTES
THE GREAT RATIONALISTS
THE TRIAL OF GALILEO
THE COPERNICAN SYSTEM
Boethius and Lady Philosophy
SAINT AUGUSTINE
διογένης / Diogenes
Urizen
Immanuel Kant
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John Locke
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en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Locke
Locke’s chief contributions included a clear formulation of the social and political principles that emerged from the turbulence of the 17th Century Britain, and an account of human knowledge
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Locke’s chief contributions included a clear formulation of the social and political principles that emerged from the turbulence of the 17th Century Britain, and an account of human knowledge
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This is why Locke called his masterpiece “Essay concerning Human Understanding” www.gutenberg.org/files/10615/10615-h/10615-h.htm and why, at the very beginning of the book, he says he regarded it as “necessary to examine our own abilities, and see what objects our understanding were, or were not, fitted to deal with.” In doing this he launched an enquiry which was taken up after him by some of the outstanding figures in philosophy -- Hume and Kant in the 18th century. Schopenhauer in the 19th, then Russel, Wittgenstein, and Popper in the 20th. Each of these individuals felt a sense of special indebtedness to others who preceded him in this line of succession, a linked chain that can be said now to constitute a tradition. ~ Page 103
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