Adler's Philosophical Dictionary: 125 Key Terms for the Philosopher's Lexicon

by Mortimer J. Adler

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Covering a variety of philosophical disciplines, this text provides definitions of such key terms as chance, choice, duty, good and evil, honour, human nature, memory, time, soul, and will, and sheds light on how they have been interpreted, used, or abused in both scholarly and common discourse.

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336+ Works 24,635 Members
Born in New York, Mortimer Adler was educated at Columbia University. Later as a philosophy instructor there, he taught in a program focused on the intellectual foundations of Western civilization. Called to the University of Chicago in 1927 by President Robert Maynard Hutchins, Adler played a major role in renovating the undergraduate curriculum show more to center on the "great books." His philosophical interests committed to the dialectical method crystallized in a defense of neo-Thomism, but he never strayed far from concerns with education and other vital public issues. From 1942 to 1945, Adler was director of the Institute for Philosophical Research, based in San Francisco, California. Beginning in 1945 he served as associate editor of Great Books of the Western World series, and in 1952 he published Syntopicon, an analytic index of the great ideas in the great books. In 1966 he became director of the editorial planning for the fifteen edition of the Encyclopaedia Britannica, and in 1974, chairman of its editorial board. Adler has been devoted in recent years to expounding his interpretations of selected great ideas and to advocating his Paideia Proposal. That proposal would require that all students receive the same quantity and quality of education, which would concentrate on the study of the great ideas expressed in the great books, a study conducted by means of the dialectical method. Mortimer J. Adler died June 28, 2001 at his home in San Mateo, California at the age of 98. (Bowker Author Biography) show less

Common Knowledge

Dedication
To Philip W. (Tom) Goetz, my friend and closest associate on Encyclopædia Britannica’s Board of Editors.
First words
In the middle of the eighteenth century, Voltaire wrote and published a work that he entitled A Philosophical Dictionary.
Quotations
There is no science of science.

Classifications

Genres
Reference, Philosophy, Nonfiction, General Nonfiction
DDC/MDS
103Philosophy & psychologyPhilosophyDictionaries, encyclopedias, concordances of philosophy
LCC
B945 .A2863 .A3Philosophy, Psychology and ReligionPhilosophy (General)By periodModernBy region or country
BISAC

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English
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Paper, Ebook
ISBNs
3
ASINs
3