Preface.
Part I: What is Philosophy?:.
1. The Origins of Philosophy.
2. The Contemporary Situation.
3. Knowledge and Reason.
4. Progress in Philosophy.
5. Philosophy and the World.
Part II: Science and the World:.
6. Empiricism.
7. The Authority of Science.
8. Many Universes.
9. Physicalism and Naturalism.
Part III: Can We Understand the World?:.
10. Science and Reason.
11. The Influence of the Enlightenment.
12. What makes Science Successful?.
13. Autonomy and Choice.
Part IV: Modernity:.
14. Laws of Nature.
15. Mechanism and Machines.
16. The Reaction against Modernity.
17. The Lure of Pragmatism.
Part V: Relativism and its Flaws:.
18. Tradition and Truth.
19. A Shared World.
20. Translation and Conceptual Differences.
21. The Incoherence of Relativism.
Part VI: The Impact of Darwinism:.
22. Relativism and Scientism.
23. Darwinism.
24. A Vicious Circle.
25. Causes and Content.
Part VII: The Challenge of Determinism:.
26. The Limits of Causation?.
27. Blind Matter.
28. Reasons and Causes.
29. Do Causes Undermine Reasons?.
Part VIII: Materialism and the Laws of Nature:.
30. The Status of Mathematics.
31. Mathematics and Materialism.
32. Laws of Nature.
33. Contingent Order.
Part IX: The Brain and the Mind:.
34. The Attack on Dualism.
35. Are We Machines?.
36. The Importance of Feelings.
37. Emergence and Causation.
Part X: Reason and Philosophy:.
38. Reason and Matter.
39. Can We Accept the Non-material?.
40. Two Worlds.
41. Philosophy Matters.
Roger Trigg is Professor of Philosophy at the University of Warwick. He is Chairman of the United Kingdom National Committee for Philosophy, representing all British philosophy departments. He is the author of many books and articles, including Rationality and Science (Blackwell 1993), Rationality and Religion (Blackwell 1998), Ideas of Human Nature (second edition, Blackwell 1999) and Understanding Social Science (second edition, Blackwell 2000).
"A bold, lucid and convincing introduction to the practice of
philosophy. Without relying on unnecessary jargon and
technicalities, Trigg guides readers into central, profound areas
of philosophical concern. Philosophy, for Trigg, is not some idle,
merely academic undertaking; philosophy matters when we try to
think seriously about values, our place in the cosmos and the power
and limits of science. This is a superb volume."
Charles Taliaferro, St. Olaf College
Roger Trigg, in Philosophy Matters (2002), confronts and elucidates
the vital philosophical issues that shape our lives today. Common
sense, he argues, depends on the philosophy of previous
generations. Trigg illustrates how philosophy is a practical tool
for understanding science, reason, the laws of nature, relativism,
Darwinism, the human brain and mind. Trigg is a professor of
philosophy at the University of Warwick." Science and Theology
News, June 2004
"The book's apparent simplicity easily belies its sophistication.
Trigg's opening chapter cleverly sets the scenefor what follows as
well as providing useful background on the emergence of Western
philosophy.This is an excellent book." Science and Christian Belief
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