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Philosophers Speak for Themselves: Berkeley, Hume, and Kant by Thomas Vernor Smith
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Philosophers Speak for Themselves: Berkeley, Hume, and Kant

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University Of Chicago Press (1957), Paperback, 384 pages

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Amazon.com Product Description (ISBN 0226764826, Paperback)

The philosophic search for truth has been evident in all ages and among all peoples. The developments of each generation require new philosophies and the recasting of old ones. The eighteenth century was no exception, and the scientific advances of the times brought about many innovations in philosophic thought. At a time when scientists were reducing certain phenomena of the natural world to expressions of a few simple mathematical laws, men such as Berkeley, Hume, and Kant were trying to discover how far and on what basis human reason could be applied with similar success in other fields. The selections in this book, preceded by short biographical sketches, document this philosophic search. "The selections are liberal and well chosen, indeed only an examination of the table of contents will give an adequate idea of the value of this volume. . . . How better can one become a modern thinker than by reading and studying at first hand the writings that have made modern thought possible?"—Roger W. Holmes, The Philosophical Review

(retrieved from Amazon Thu, 07 Jan 2010 00:44:05 -0500)

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