Inescapable Introduction Philosophy Self Western
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The Inescapable Self: An Introduction to Western Philosophy Since Descartes The Inescapable Self: An Introduction to Western Philosophy Since Descartes
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History of Western Philosophy (Russell) - History of Western Philosophy (originally subtitled And Its Connection with Political and Social Circumstances from the Earliest Times to the Present Day) (1945) is a guide to Western philosophy from the pre-Socratic philosophers to the early 20th Century, written by the philosopher Bertrand Russell.
History of Western philosophy - The usefulness of dividing philosophy into Western philosophy and other philosophies is open to challenge, not the least for speaking down to those other philosophies. To say this is not to deny that there are important traditions in philosophy that are intimately bound up with historical and geographical circumstances.
Western philosophy - Western philosophy is a line of related philosophical thinking, beginning in Ancient Greece, and including the predominant philosophical thinking of Europe and its former colonies, and continues to this day. The concept of philosophy itself originated in the West, derived from the ancient Greek word philosophia (φιλοσοφια); literally, "the love of wisdom" (philein = "to love" + sophia = wisdom, in the sense of theoretical or cosmic insight).
Medieval philosophy - Medieval philosophy is the philosophy of Western Europe in the era now known as medieval or the Middle Ages, the period roughly extending from the fall of the Roman Empire to the Renaissance. Though medieval philosophy is widely varied, one defining feature which distinguishes this period, in the western world, is the degree to which competing or contradictory philosophical views and systems were brought into dialogue with each other.
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