<i>Early Modern Philosophy </i>offers a rich and impressive introduction to its period, putting a diverse array of philosophers and their primary texts into conversation. The accompanying explanations are straightforward and insightful - to scholars and students alike, this book will be a boon.
- Emily Thomas, Professor of Philosophy, Durham University, UK
This reader offers a truly impressive array of material: it incorporates both male and female thinkers, it’s diverse in terms of its ideas and themes, and innovative in terms of its approach. It will be essential for anyone looking for a genuinely expansive introduction to early modern philosophy.
- Jacqueline Broad, Professor of Philosophy, Monash University, Australia
For anyone in search of the philosophers who influenced one of the richest moments in Western intellectual history, this inclusive reader is the place to start. Early Modern Philosophy showcases an unrivalled range of thinkers. Through them, you are introduced to a selection of their texts that return important philosophical ideas and debates to our understanding of modern philosophy. Addressing a one-sided view of intellectual history that has persisted for centuries, this reader goes beyond the usual focus on rationalism and empiricism with readings organised into three parts:
- Dualistic theories of human nature as the union of a mind and a body
- Debates concerning social relations and education
- The nature of reality and the way in which the mind reveals or constructs
our understanding of the world
The thematic approach puts women philosophers and understudied figures in direct conversation with canonical thinkers. Extracts from primary sources are accompanied by biographical details, questions for reflection, further reading and summaries that place philosophers in their historical contexts.
Contents
Preface
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Part I Understanding Human Nature
1 Early Modern Dualism: René Descartes, Henry More, and Anton Wilhelm Amo
2 The Mind-Body Problem: René Descartes and Elisabeth of Bohemia
3 Idealist Responses: Anne Conway and Gottfried Leibniz
4 Materialist Responses: Thomas Hobbes and Margaret Cavendish
Part II Sociability and Education
5 The Nature of Love: John Norris, Mary Astell, and Damaris Masham
6 The Nature of Morality: John Locke and Catharine Trotter Cockburn
7 The Nature of Education: Anna van Schurman and Mary Astell
8 Sympathy and Morality: Sophie de Grouchy and David Hume
9 The Debate about Slavery: Jacobus Capitein and Ottobah Cugoano
Part III Mind and Reality
10 God and World: Baruch Spinoza and George Berkeley
11 The Nature of Space: Samuel Clarke and Émilie du Châtelet
12 The Nature of Causation: David Hume and Thomas Reid
13 A Transcendental Approach: Mary Shepherd and Immanuel Kant
Conclusion
Notes
Glossary
Index
Produktdetaljer
Biographical note
John Grey is Teaching Professor in Philosophy at Michigan State University, USA.
Jonathan Head is Lecturer in Philosophy at Keele University, UK.