HISTORY OF PHILOSOPHY

BY

ALFRED WEBER
PROFESSOR IN THE UNIVERSITY OF STRASBURG

AUTHORIZED TRANSLATION
BY
FRANK THILLY, A.M., Ph.D.
PROFESSOR OF PHILOSOPHY IN THE UNIVERSITY OF MISSOURI

FROM THE SIXTH FRENCH EDITION

NEW YORK
CHARLES SCRIBNER'S SONS
1908


CONTENTS

INTRODUCTION
(§§ 1 - 3)

I.  GREEK PHILOSOPHY 
(§§ 4 - 26)

II.  PHILOSOPHY OF THE MIDDLE AGES 
(§§ 27 - 48)

III.  MODERN PHILOSOPHY
(§§ 49 - 71)

FIRST PERIOD
THE AGE OF INDEPENDENT METAPHYSICS
(From Bruno to Locke and Kant)

§ 49.  Giordano Bruno
§ 50.  Tommaso Campanella
§ 51.  Francis Bacon
§ 52.  Thomas Hobbes
§ 53.  Descartes
§ 54.  The Cartesian School
§ 55.  Spinoza
         I.  Definitions
        II.  Deductions
                (1)   Theory of Substance
                (2)   Theory of Attributes
                (3)   Theory of Modes
§ 56.  Leibniz

SECOND PERIOD
THE AGE OF CRITICISM

§ 57.  John Locke
§ 58.  Berkeley
§ 59.  Condillac
§ 60.  The Progress of Materialism
§ 61.  David Hume
§ 62.  Immanuel Kant
          I.  Critique of Pure Reason
         II.  Critique of Practical Reason
        III.  Critique of Judgment
§ 63.  Kant and German Idealism
§ 64.  Fichte
§ 65.  Schelling
§ 66.  Hegel
          I.  Logic, or Genealogy of Pure Concepts
         II.  Philosophy of Nature
        III.  Philosophy of Mind

The creation of this e-text of History of Philosophy by Alfred Weber utilized resources of the University of Idaho, Department of Philosophy. 

Permission is granted for electronic copying, distribution in print form for educational purposes and personal use.  If you duplicate the document, please indicate the original source.  No permission is granted for commercial use of this material.   

J. Carl Mickelsen