Histoire Des Causes Premieres, Ou Exposition Sommaire Des Pensees Des Philosophes Sur Les Principes de Etres (Classic Reprint)
by Charles Batteux
Kant Und Das Problem Der Metaphysik (Klostermann Rotereihe, #35)
by Martin Heidegger
Metaphysics and Scientific Realism (Eide, #9)
David Malet Armstrong (8 July 1926–13 May 2014) has been one of the most influential contemporary metaphysicians working in the analytic tradition and surely the greatest 20th century Australian philosopher. His main merit is to have reestablished metaphysics as a respectable branch of philosophy placing it at the centre of the philosophical debate, and giving it the status of an authoritative and competent interlocutor of both rational and empirical sciences. By means of a rigorously argumentat...
God, Truth, and other Enigmas (Philosophische Analyse / Philosophical Analysis, #65)
The book God, Truth, and other Enigmas is a collection of eighteen essays that fall under four headings: (God's) Existence/Non-Existence, Omniscience, Truth, and Metaphysical Enigmas. The essays vary widely in topic and tone. They provide the reader with an overview of contemporary philosophical approaches to the subjects that are indicated in the title of the book.
The Origin of Time (SUNY Series in Contemporary Continental Philosophy)
by Heath Massey
A Metaphysical Interpretation of the Bible
by PhD Steven L. Hairfield
W. Norris Clarke's metaphysics of the universe as a journey rests on six major positions: the unrestricted dynamism of the mind, the primacy of the act of existence, the participation structure of reality, and the person, considered as both the starting point of philosophy and the source of the categories needed for a flexible contemporary metaphysics. Reflecting on his conscious life and the universe around him, the finite person mounts by a two-fold path to its Infinite source, who, though imm...
Vico and Humanism (Emory Vico Studies; 3 19: General Literature; 23)
by Ernesto Grassi
Cosmic Consciousness (Library of the Mystic Arts: A Library of Ancient and Modern, #21)
by Dr Richard Maurice Bucke
Human beings have always been specialists, but over the past two centuries division of labor has become deeper, ubiquitous, and much more fluid. The form it now takes brings in its wake a series of problems that are simultaneously philosophical and practical, having to do with coordinating the activities of experts in different disciplines who do not understand one another. Because these problems are unrecognized, and because we do not have solutions for them, we are on the verge of an age in wh...
The Life and Mystical Writings of Dr. Robert Fludd
by J B Craven and Robert Fludd