Synopsis of Western Philosophy
By Tom Maguire
Index by Themes
This is a summary of the history of Western thought presented in three main themes that have shaped our way of thinking, believing, and acting:
Epistemology
— philosophers —
Naturalised epistemology (Quine)
The Logic of Scientific Discovery (Karl Popper)
The Structure of Scientific Revolutions (Thomas Kuhn)
Experience and Nature (John Dewey)
The Thought: A Logical Inquiry (Gottlob Frege)
Philosophical Investigations (Ludwig Wittgenstein)
Cartesian Linguistics (Noam Chomsky)
The Emperor’s New Mind (Roger Penrose)
Morality
— philosophers —
The Theory of Moral Sentiments (Adam Smith)
Utilitarianism (John Stuart Mill)
Introduction to the Principles of Morals and Legislation (Jeremy Bentham)
Moral Tribes (Joshua Greene)
Conscience: The Origins of Moral Intuition (Patricia Churchland)
To Have or To Be? (Erich Fromm)
The Social Contract (Jean-Jacques Rousseau)
Nicomachean Ethics (Aristotle)
Ontology
— philosophers —
Quantum Ontology
The Structure of the World
The Extended Mind
The Construction Of Social Reality
The Phenomenon of Man
Being and Time
Being and Nothingness
The Social Construction of Reality
The Great Chain of Being
Monadology
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