The Approach to Philosophy

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C. Scribner's Sons, 1905 - 448 psl.

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NATURAL SCIENCE AND PHILOSOPHY
114
The Spheres of Philosophy and Science
117
The Procedure of a Philosophy of Science
120
The Origin of the Scientific Interest
123
Skill as Free
124
Skill as Social
126
Science for Accommodation and Construction
127
Method and Fundamental Conceptions of Natural Science The Descriptive Method
128
Space Time and Prediction
130
48 The Quantitative Method
133
The General Development of Science
134
The Determination of the Limits of Natural Science
135
Natural Science is Abstract
136
The Meaning of Abstractness in Truth
139
But Scientific Truth is Valid for Reality
142
Relative Practical Value of Science and Phi losophy
143
PART II
147
METAPHYSICS AND EPISTOMOLOGY
149
The Dependence of the Order of Philosophical Problems upon the Initial Interest
152
Transcendentalism or Absolute Idealism
177
The Parts of Formal Logic Definition Self
184
Priority of Concepts
188
Esthetics Deals with the Most General Con ditions of Beauty Subjectivistic and For malistic Tendencies
189
Ethics Deals with the Most General Conditions of Moral Goodness
191
Rationalism
193
Eudæmonism and Pietism Rigorism and Intuitionism
195
Duty and Freedom Ethics and Metaphysics
196
85
198
The Problems of Religion The Special In terests of Faith
199
Theology Deals with the Nature and Proof of God
200
The Cosmological Proof of God
203
The Place of Imagination in Religion
204
God and the World Theism and Pantheism
205
Metaphysics and Theology
207
Psychology is the Theory of the Soul
208
Spiritual Substance
209
Intellectualism and Voluntarism
210
Freedom of the Will Necessitarianism De terminism and Indeterminism
211
Immortality Survival and Eternalism
212

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