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Great Ideas of Philosophy

Great Ideas of Philosophy

Great Ideas of Philosophy

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ut cannot know what it is. Ultimately, our knowledge claims must be utterly bounded by the pure intuitions <strong>of</strong> timeand space and the pure categories <strong>of</strong> the understanding.Ontology: The study <strong>of</strong> what really exists, one <strong>of</strong> the key questions central to the concept <strong>of</strong> metaphysics.<strong>Philosophy</strong>: The rational pursuit <strong>of</strong> truths deemed to be answers to perennial questions, as well as a historical study<strong>of</strong> intractable problems; literally, the love <strong>of</strong> wisdom.Phrenology: A Victorian-era science <strong>of</strong> character divination, faculty psychology, and brain theory derived from theViennese physician Franz Joseph Gall’s system, which held that the surface <strong>of</strong> the skull could be read as an accurateindex <strong>of</strong> an individual’s psychological aptitudes and tendencies.Phronesis: Greek term for practical wisdom or prudence; the application <strong>of</strong> good judgment to human conduct, incontrast with the more theoretical inquiry leading to sophia, or wisdom generally.Phusis: Greek, “nature.”Physiognomy: The study <strong>of</strong> the shape and configuration <strong>of</strong> a person’s face to determine his or her character andintelligence.Pluralism: The philosophical doctrine that reality consists <strong>of</strong> several basic substances or elements.Polis: Life within a settled community, in which one participates and from which one draws lessons for life.Positivism: A form <strong>of</strong> empiricism that bases all knowledge on perceptual experience, rather than on intuition orrevelation.Pragmatism: The doctrine that practical consequences are the criteria <strong>of</strong> knowledge, meaning, and value.Providential: The mode <strong>of</strong> causation employed by God, according to Hellenistic philosophy. The cosmos is createdand ordered by a perfect rational entity, whose knowledge is also perfect. The creative entity takes an interest in itscreation.Pyrrhonism: An early Greek form <strong>of</strong> Skepticism.Pythagorean theorem: One <strong>of</strong> the earliest theorems known to ancient civilizations; named for the Greekmathematician and philosopher Pythagoras. The Pythagorean theorem states: “The area <strong>of</strong> the square built upon thehypotenuse <strong>of</strong> a right triangle is equal to the sum <strong>of</strong> the areas <strong>of</strong> the squares upon the remaining sides.”Res cogitans/res extensa: The metaphysical dualism on which the Cartesian philosophical system rests. Rescogitans is God and the human soul; res extensa is the corporeal world.Revelation: An enlightening or astonishing disclosure. Also, communication <strong>of</strong> knowledge to man by a divine orsupernatural agency.Romanticism: A movement in literature, art, and intellectual thought during the late 18 th and early 19 th centuriesthat celebrated nature rather than civilization and valued imagination and emotion over rationality.Sophia: Greek, “wisdom.”Sophists: Greek philosophers who showed complete indifference to the problems <strong>of</strong> the world <strong>of</strong> matter andcentered their efforts on man. But man can be an object <strong>of</strong> study in his sense knowledge, as well as in the morepr<strong>of</strong>ound world <strong>of</strong> reason. The Sophists stopped at the data <strong>of</strong> experience—at empirical, not rational, knowledge—and from this point <strong>of</strong> view, they wished to judge the world <strong>of</strong> reality.Stoics: Greek philosophers whose worldview was one <strong>of</strong> a rationally governed universe <strong>of</strong> material entities, eachanswering to its controlling principle and, thus, participating in the overall cosmic logos. In its most developedform, Stoicism takes the lawfulness <strong>of</strong> the cosmos as the model on which human life is to proceed. The rule <strong>of</strong> lawis the defining mark <strong>of</strong> our humanity, according to this philosophy.Sturm und Drang: German; “storm and stress.” Romanticism perceived this evolutionary struggle that producesnew and better things not predictable in a mechanistic view.Superego: According to Sigmund Freud’s theory <strong>of</strong> psychoanalysis, one <strong>of</strong> the three parts that make up the self.The superego is purported to represent our conscience and counteract the id with moral and ethical thoughts.42©2004 The Teaching Company Limited Partnership

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