Preface
PART ONE Getting Started In Philosophy
The Role Of Philosophy
PART TWO What Do We Know, And How Do We Know It?
Introduction
Plato Knowledge is Recollection
Edited from Meno. Translated by Benjamin Jowett, 1892.
Aristotle A Writing Tablet
Edited from De Anima, Book III, Part 4. Translated by R. D. Hicks, 1907.
Augustine The Possibility of Deception
Edited from City of God, Book XI, Chapter 26. Translated by Rev. Marcus Dods,1866.
René Descartes Doubt and Certainty
Edited from Meditations on First Philosophy, Meditations I and II. Translated by John Veitch, 1901.
John Locke Knowledge Derives From Experience
Edited from An Essay Concerning Human Understanding, 1690, Introduction, and Book I, Chapter I.
Gottfried Leibniz Deep Inside
Edited from New Essays on Human Understanding. Translated by Alfred Gideox Langley, 1896.
Mary Astell Degrees of Clearness
Edited from A Serious Proposal to the Ladies, 1697, Chapter III.
David Hume Matters of Fact and Relations of Ideas
Edited from An Enquiry Concerning Human Understanding, 1748, Sections II, IV-V.
Immanuel Kant The Possibility of Experience
Edited from Critique of Pure Reason. Introduction. Translated by J. M. D. Meiklejohn, 1900.
Charles S. Peirce The Nature of Inquiry
Edited from Popular Science Monthly 12, November, 1877.
Helen E. Longino Can There Be A Feminist Science?
From Hypatia, vol. 2, no. 3, 1987. pp 51-64.
Noretta Koertge Wrestling with the Social Constructor
From Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences, Vol. 775, 1995, pp 266–273.
Edmund Gettier Is Justified True Belief Knowledge?
From Analysis 23, 1963, pp 121-123.
Raymond Smullyan An Epistemological Nightmare
Margaret MacDonald Sleeping and Waking
From Mind, Vol. 62, No. 246, 1953, pp 202-215.
John Pollock Just a Brain in a Vat
Edited from Contemporary Theories of Knowledge, Rowman & Littlefield, 1987.
Linda Zagzebski Knowledge and the Motive for Truth
From "Knowledge and the Motive for Truth," reprinted with permission of the author.
PART THREE The Stuff That Dreams Are Made Of
Introduction
Plato The Divided Line and the Cave
Edited from Republic, Books VI-VII. Translated by Benjamin Jowett, 1892.
Aristotle First Principles
Edited from Metaphysics, Books I- II, IV, VII, X, and XII. Translated by W. D. Ross, 1908.
Margaret Cavendish Observations
Edited from Observations Upon Experimental Philosophy, 1666, Sections 1-2, 16, and 20.
John Locke Primary and Secondary Qualities
Edited from An Essay Concerning Human Understanding, 1690, Book II, Chapters VIII-IX.
Gottfried Leibniz The Building Blocks of Reality
Edited from The Monadology. Sections 1-20. Translated by Robert Latta, 1898.
George Berkeley To Be is to Be Perceived
Edited from A Treatise Concerning the Principles of Human Knowledge, 1710, Sections 1-41.
David Hume Commit it to the Flames
Edited from An Enquiry Concerning Human Understanding, 1748, Section XII, Parts 1 and III.
Mary Shepherd Ideas
Edited from Essays on the Perception of an External Universe, 1827, Preface and Chapter 1.
Immanuel Kant Regarding an External World
Edited from Critique of Pure Reason, Preface; Second Division, Book II, Chapter 1.Translated by J. M.
D. Meiklejohn, 1900.
Margaret MacDonald Things and Processes
From Analysis, Vol. 6, No. 1, 1938, pp 1-10.
Martin Heidegger Metaphysics
From Introduction to Metaphysics. Translated by Gregory Fried and Richard Polt, 2000, Chapter 1, pp
1-14.
Hannah Arendt Eternity Versus Immortality
From The Human Condition, 1958, pp 17-21.
Katherine Hawley Science as a Guide to Metaphysics?
From Synthese, 149, 2006, pp 451-470.
PART FOUR God, Or Where Did All This Stuff Come From?
Introduction
4A. Can God's Existence Be Proved Based On Experience?
Introduction
Plato The Beginning of Everything
Edited from Timaeus. Translated by Benjamin Jowett, 1892.
Thomas Aquinas The Five Ways
Edited from Summa Theologica: First Part, Question 2, Article 3. Translated by Fathers of the English
Dominican Province, 1911.
Gottfried Leibniz Sufficient Reason
Edited from The Monadology: Sections 29-36. Translated by Robert Latta, 1898.
George Berkeley The Author of Nature
Edited from A Treatise Concerning the Principles of Human Knowledge, 1710.
William Paley The Watchmaker Argument
Edited from Natural Theology, 1802.
David Hume Against the Watchmaker Argument
Edited from Dialogues Concerning Natural Religion, 1779, Parts 2 and 5.
4B. Can God's Existence Be Proved Independent Of Experience?
Introduction
Anselm of Canterbury The Existence of God
Edited from Proslogion, Preface, Chapter II-V. Translated by Sidney N. Deane, 1903.
René Descartes The Idea of God
Edited from Meditations on First Philosophy, Meditation V. Translated by John Veitch, 1901.
Anne Conway On God
Edited from The Principles of the Most Ancient and Modern Philosophy, 1692, Chapters I-III.
David Hume Why is There Something Rather Than Nothing?
Edited from Dialogues Concerning Natural Religion, 1779, Part 9,
Sören Kierkegaard God Cannot Be Proven to Exist
Edited from Philosophical Fragments. Translated by David F. Swenson, 1936; translation revised by
Howard V. Hong, Princeton University Press, 1985.
Markus Lammenranta Is Descartes's Reasoning Viciously Circular?
From British Journal for the History of Philosophy. 14 (2) 2006: 323-330.
4C. Why Do Suffering And Evil Exist?
Introduction
George Hayward Joyce The Problem of Evil
Edited from Principles of Natural Theology, 1922: Chapter XVII.
J. L. Mackie Evil and Omnipotence
From Mind, New Series, Vol. 64, No. 254. Apr., 1955, pp 200-212.
Keith Parsons A Simple Statement of the Problem of Evil
Edited from The Secular Web, 2011.
4D. Belief
Introduction
Blaise Pascal The Wager
Edited from The Thoughts of Blaise Pascal, Translated by Charles Kegan Paul, 1901.
Damaris Cudworth Masham A Natural Inscription
Edited from Occasional Thoughts, 1705.
Friedrich Nietzsche God is Dead
Edited from The Gay Science. Translated by Thomas Common, 1910.
William. K. Clifford The Ethics of Belief
Edited from Contemporary Review, 1876.
William James The Will to Believe
Edited from New World, June, 1896.
PART FIVE Who, What, Where, And When Am I?
Introduction
5A. What Is Mind? No Matter. What Is Matter? Never Mind
Introduction
René Descartes Mind and Body
Edited from Meditations on First Philosophy: Meditation VI. Translated by John Veitch, 1901.
Margaret Cavendish A Double Perception
Edited from Philosophical Letters, 1664, Letters 35-37.
Anne Conway One and the Same Thing
Edited from The Principles of the Most Ancient and Modern Philosophy, 1692, Chapters VI-VII and IX.
Lisa Shapiro The Correspondence
From "Princess Elizabeth and Descartes: The Union of Soul and Body and the Practice of Philosophy,"
British Journal for the History of Philosophy, 7:3, 1999, pp 503-520.
5B. Consciousness
Introduction
William James Does Consciousness Exist?
Edited from Journal of Philosophy, Psychology and Scientific Methods, 1904.
Thomas Nagel What is it Like to Be a Bat?
From The Philosophical Review, LXXXIII, 4, October 1974, pp 435-450.
Patricia Smith Churchland The Hornswoggle Problem
From the Journal of Consciousness Studies, 3, 1996, pp 402–8.
Max Velmans How to Define Consciousness—and How Not to Define Consciousness
From the Journal of Consciousness Studies, 16 (5), 2009, pp 139-156.
5C. Personal Identity
Introduction
John Locke Identity and Diversity
Edited from An Essay Concerning Human Understanding, 1690, Book II, Chapter XXVII.
David Hume I Am a Bundle of Perceptions
Edited from A Treatise of Human Nature, 1777, Vol. I, Book I, Part IV, Section VI.
Bernard Williams The Self and the Future
From The Philosophical Review, Vol. 79, No. 2, 1970, pp 161-180.
J. David Velleman So It Goes
From The Amherst Lecture in Philosophy 1, 2006, pp 1–23.
PART SIX Free Will And Determinism
Introduction
John Locke Free Agents
Edited from An Essay Concerning Human Understanding, 1690, Book II, Chapter XXI.
Baruch Spinoza Everything Happens Out of Necessity
Edited from Ethics, Part II, Proposition XLVIII. Translated by R.H.M. Elwes, 1883.
Paul-Henri d’Holbach A Series of Necessary Moments
Edited from The System of Nature, Chapter XI. Translated by H. D. Robinson, 1868.
Jean-Paul Sartre Condemned to Be Free
Edited from Existentialism is a Humanism. Lecture given in 1945, World Publishing Company, 1956.
Richard Taylor I Can
From The Philosophical Review, Vol. 69, No. 1, January, 1960, pp 78-89.
Raymond Smullyan Take My Free Will, Please!
From "Is God a Taoist?"
Philippa Foot Free Will as Involving Determinism
From The Philosophical Review, Vol. 66, No. 4, October, 1957, pp 439-450.
PART SEVEN The Good And The Bad
Introduction
7A. Morality
Introduction
Plato Why Should We Be Good?
Edited from Republic, Books II and IX. Translated by Benjamin Jowett, 1892.
Aristotle Virtues
Edited from Nicomachean Ethics, Books I and II. Translated by W. D. Ross, 1908.
David Hume Morality is Determined by Sentiment
Edited from An Enquiry Concerning the Principles of Morals, 1777, Section I and Appendix I.
Immanuel Kant Duty
Edited from The Metaphysical Elements of Ethics, Introduction. Translated by Thomas Kingsmill
Abbott, 1909.
John Stuart Mill The Principle of Utility
Edited from Utilitarianism, 1861, Chapters II and IV.
Friedrich Nietzsche A Free Spirit
Edited from Beyond Good and Evil, Chapter II. Translated by Helen Zimmern, 1913.
Thomas H. Huxley Evolution and Ethics
Edited from The Romanes Lecture, 1893.
Rosalind Hursthouse Virtue Ethics
From The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy, Fall 2013 Edition.
David B. Wong Moral Relativism
From Routledge Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
7B. Applied Ethics
Introduction
James Rachels Active and Passive Euthanasia
From The New England Journal of Medicine, Vol. 292, January 9, 1975, pp 78-80.
Judith Jarvis Thomson A Defense of Abortion
From Philosophy & Public Affairs, Vol. 1, no. 1, Fall 1971, pp 47-66.
Don Marquis Why Abortion Is Immoral
From Journal of Philosophy, Vol. 86, April, 1989, pp 183-202.
Peter Singer Famine, Affluence and Morality
From Philosophy and Public Affairs, Vol. 1, no. 3, Spring, 1972, pp 229-243.
John Harris The Survival Lottery
From Philosophy, Vol. 50, (191), 1975, pp 81-87.
Richard Hanley A Wolf in Sheep’s Cloning?
From Monash Bioethics Review, 18.1, 1999, 59-62.
PART EIGHT Failure To Communicate: Political And Social Philosophy
Introduction
Plato Should I Obey the Laws?
Edited from Crito. Translated by Benjamin Jowett, 1892.
Aristotle A Political Animal
Edited from Politics, Book I, Parts I, II and IX. Translated by Benjamin Jowett, 1885.
Thomas Hobbes Solitary, Poor, Nasty, Brutish, and Short
Edited from Leviathan, 1651, Chapters XIII-XV, and XVII.
John Locke For the Good of the People
Edited from Second Treatise of Civil Government, 1689, Chapters VII, IX, and XIX.
Catharine Macaulay Observations on Revolution
Edited from Observations on the Reflections of the Right Hon. Edmund Burke, on the Revolution in
France, 1791.
John Stuart Mill Liberty
Edited from On Liberty, 1859, Chapter I.
Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels Workers of the World, Unite!
Edited from Manifesto of the Communist Party, 1888, Chapters I, II, and IV.
John Dewey Democratic Habits of Thought and Action
Edited from "Democracy and Educational Administration," School and Society, 45, April 3, 1937), pp
457-467.
Mary Wollstonecraft A Vindication of the Rights of Woman
Edited from A Vindication of the Rights of Woman, 1792, Chapter 13.
Karen Green Parity and Procedural Justice
From Essays in Philosophy, Volume 7, Issue 1, Article 4, 2006.
Richard Rorty Love And Money
From Common Knowledge, Vol 1, No. 1, Spring, 1992, pp 12-16.
Kwame Anthony Appiah Identity: Political not Cultural
From Field Work: Sites in Literary and Cultural Studies, Marjorie Garber, Rebecca L. Walkowitz,
Paul B. Franklin (eds), New York, Routledge, 1997, pp 34–40.
PART NINE I Know It When I See It: Art And Aesthetics
Introduction
Aristotle Tragedy
Edited from Poetics, Section 1, Parts VI-IX, and XXIV-XXV. Translated by S. H. Butcher, 1895.
Henri Bergson An Animal Which Laughs, and is Laughed At
Edited from Laughter, Chapter I. Translated by Cloudesley Brereton and Fred Rothwell, 1914.
George Santayana A Pledge of the Possible
Edited from The Sense of Beauty, 1896.
Arthur Schopenhauer Art Takes Away the Mist
From The World as Will and Idea, Vol. III, Chapter XXXIV. Translated by R. B. Haldane, and J.
Kemp, 1909.
Amie L. Thomasson Ontological Innovation in Art
From the Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism, 68/2, 2010, pp 119-130.
PART TEN Does Life Have Any Meaning?
Introduction
Epicurus In Waking or in Dream
Edited from Stoic and Epicurean. Translated by Robert Drew Hicks, 1910.
Arthur Schopenhauer The Vanity of Existence
Edited from Essays of Arthur Schopenhauer. Translated by T. Bailey Saunders, 1902.
Sören Kierkegaard What Then Would Life Be?
Edited from Fear and Trembling. Translated by Walter Lowrie, Princeton University Press, 1941.
Thomas Nagel The Absurd
From The Journal of Philosophy, Vol. 68, No. 20, 1971, pp 716-727.
Richard Taylor The Meaning of Life
From Good and Evil, Prometheus Books, Amherst, NY, 2000.
Susan Wolf The Meanings of Lives
From "The Meanings of Lives," reprinted with permission of the author.
Brooke Alan Trisel Intended and Unintended Life
From The Philosophical Forum, 2012, Vol. 43 (4), pp 395-403.
EPILOGUE
Bertrand Russell The Value of Philosophy
Edited from The Problems of Philosophy, 1912, Chapter XV.
Appendix 1 The Role Of Logic
Appendix 2 A Guide To Writing Philosophy Papers
Glossary
Stan Baronett is also the author of Logic, 3rd Edition (2015).
"This looks like an exciting new text for beginning Philosophy
students. Exciting because it includes in its readings some unique
selections from philosophers who rarely make it into these texts
but who offer startling insights that fill in the evolving picture
of how philosophy started then and has developed up to now. A very
nice mixture of these philosophers are women whom we know were
significant but who have been given short shrift by traditional
philosophy. This is also a very meaty book with lots of selections
to choose from."--William S. Jamison, University of Alaska,
Anchorage"I appreciate the care and thoughtfulness with which
Baronett has put together the introductions. They do a lot more, in
my opinion, to engage the student-reader than the introductions
that I find in other similar textbooks, in which they tend to be
written with jargon and abstruse terms, which Baronett avoids . . .
. Overall, Journey into Philosophy would work exceptionally well,
in my opinion, for philosophy departments in which the introductory
course is also a history of philosophy course. Having said that, I
imagine there could very well be instructors who might find the
book useful also for a problems-based introductory course."
--Seung-Kee Lee, Drew University"I like this book for use in an
introductory philosophy course. It is engaging, accessible, and
contains an appropriate selection of readings that nicely integrate
to give students a comprehensive introduction to basic
philosophical problems. The readings address key topics such as
knowledge, existence, God, mind/body, consciousness, free will and
determinism, ethics, politics, aesthetics, etc. Within each topic,
the selected readings nicely balance classic and contemporary
texts."
--Corinne Bloch-Mullins, Marquette University
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