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Philosophy
(redirected from Philosphical)

   Also found in: Wikipedia, Hutchinson 0.04 sec.
philosophy [Gr.,=love of wisdom], study of the ultimate reality, causes, and principles underlying being and thinking. It has many aspects and different manifestations according to the problems involved and the method of approach and emphasis used by the individual philosopher. This article deals with the nature and development of Western philosophical thought. Eastern philosophy, while founded in religion, contains rigorously developed systems; for these, see Buddhism Buddhism (bd`ĭzəm), religion and philosophy founded in India c.525 B.
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; Confucianism Confucianism (kənfy
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; Hinduism Hinduism (hin`d
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; Islam Islam (ĭsläm`, ĭs`läm), [Arab.,=submission to God], world religion founded by the Prophet Muhammad.
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; Jainism Jainism (jī`nĭzəm) [i.e., the religion of Jina], religious system of India practiced by about 5,000,000 persons.
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; Shinto Shinto (shĭn`tō), ancient native religion of Japan still practiced in a form modified by the influence of Buddhism and Confucianism.
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; Taoism Taoism (däu`ĭzəm)
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; Vedanta Vedanta (vĭdän`tə, –dăn`–), one of the six classical systems of Indian philosophy.
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; and related articles.

Distinguishing Characteristics

This search for truth began, in the Western world, when the Greeks first established (c.600 B.C.) inquiry independent of theological creeds. Philosophy is distinguished from theology in that philosophy rejects dogma and deals with speculation rather than faith. Philosophy differs from science in that both the natural and the social sciences base their theories wholly on established fact, whereas philosophy also covers areas of inquiry where no facts as such are available. Originally, science as such did not exist and philosophy covered the entire field, but as facts became available and tentative certainties emerged, the sciences broke away from metaphysical speculation to pursue their different aims. Thus physics was once in the realm of philosophy, and it was only in the early 20th cent. that psychology was established as a science apart from philosophy. However, many of the greatest philosophers were also scientists, and philosophy still considers the methods (as opposed to the materials) of science as its province.

Branches

Philosophy is traditionally divided into several branches. Metaphysics metaphysics (mĕtəfĭz`ĭks), branch of philosophy concerned with the ultimate nature of existence.
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 inquires into the nature and ultimate significance of the universe. Logic logic, the systematic study of valid inference. A distinction is drawn between logical validity and truth. Validity merely refers to formal properties of the process of inference.
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 is concerned with the laws of valid reasoning. Epistemology epistemology (ĭpĭs'təmŏl`əjē) [Gr.
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 investigates the nature of knowledge and the process of knowing. Ethics ethics, in philosophy, the study and evaluation of human conduct in the light of moral principles. Moral principles may be viewed either as the standard of conduct that individuals have constructed for themselves or as the body of obligations and duties that a
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 deals with problems of right conduct. Aesthetics aesthetics (ĕsthĕt`ĭks)
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 attempts to determine the nature of beauty and the criteria of artistic judgment. Within metaphysics a division is made according to fundamental principles. The three major positions are idealism, which maintains that what is real is in the form of thought rather than matter; materialism, which considers matter and the motion of matter as the universal reality; and dualism, which gives thought and matter equal status. Naturalism and positivism are forms of materialism.

The History of Philosophy

Historically, philosophy falls into three large periods: classical (Greek and Roman) philosophy, which was concerned with the ultimate nature of reality and the problem of virtue in a political context; medieval philosophy, which in the West is virtually inseparable from early Christian thought; and, beginning with the Renaissance, modern philosophy, whose main direction has been epistemology.

Classical Philosophy

The first Greek philosophers, the Milesian school in the early 6th cent. B.C., consisting of Thales Thales (thā`lēz), c.636–c.546 B.C.
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, Anaximander Anaximander (ənăk'sĭmăn`dər), c.611–c.547 B.C., Greek philosopher, b. Miletus; pupil of Thales .
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, and Anaximenes Anaximenes (ăn'əksĭm`ĭnēz), Greek philosopher, 6th cent. B.C., last of the Milesian school founded by Thales .
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, were concerned with finding the one natural element underlying all nature and being. They were followed by Heraclitus Heraclitus (hĕrəklī`təs), c.535–c.475 B.C., Greek philosopher of Ephesus, of noble birth.
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, Pythagoras Pythagoreans are best known for two teachings: the transmigration of souls and the theory that numbers constitute the true nature of things. The believers performed purification rites and followed moral, ascetic, and dietary rules to enable their souls to achieve a higher rank in
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, Parmenides Parmenides (pärmĕn`ĭdēz), b. c.515 B.C., Greek philosopher of Elea, leading figure of the Eleatic school .
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, Leucippus Leucippus (lsĭp`əs), 5th cent. B.C., Greek philosopher.
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, Empedocles Empedocles (ĕmpĕd`əklēz), c.495–c.435 B.C., Greek philosopher, b. Acragas (present Agrigento), Sicily.
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, Anaxagoras Anaxagoras (ăn'əksăg`ərəs), c.500–428 B.C., Greek philosopher of Clazomenae.
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, and Democritus Democritus (dĭmŏk`rĭtəs), c.460–c.370 B.C., Greek philosopher of Abdera; pupil of Leucippus.
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, who took divergent paths in exploring the same problem.

Socrates Socrates (sŏk`rətēz), 469–399 B.C., Greek philosopher of Athens.
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 was the first to inquire also into social and political problems and was the first to use the dialectical method. His speculations were carried on by his pupil Plato Plato (plā`tō), 427?–347 B.C., Greek philosopher.
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, and by Plato's pupil Aristotle Aristotle (ăr'ĭstŏt`əl), 384–322 B.C., Greek philosopher, b. Stagira. He is sometimes called the Stagirite.
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, at the Academy in Athens. Roman philosophy was based mainly on the later schools of Greek philosophy, such as the Sophists Sophists (sŏf`ĭsts), originally, itinerant teachers in Greece (5th cent. B.C.
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, the Cynics Cynics (sĭn`ĭks) [Gr.,=doglike, probably from their manners and their meeting place, the Cynosarges, an academy for Athenian
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, Stoicism Stoicism (stō`ĭsĭzəm), school of philosophy founded by Zeno of Citium (in Cyprus) c.300 B.C.
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, and epicureanism epicureanism (ĕp'ĭky
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. In late antiquity, Neoplatonism Neoplatonism (nē'ōplā`tənĭzəm), ancient mystical philosophy based on the doctrines of Plato .
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, chiefly represented by Plotinus Plotinus (plōtī`nəs), 205–270, Neoplatonist philosopher.
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, became the leading philosophical movement and profoundly affected the early development of Christian theology. Arab thinkers, notably Avicenna Avicenna (ăvĭsĕn`ə), Arabic Ibn Sina, 980–1037, Islamic philosopher and physician, of Persian origin, b.
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 and Averroës Averroës (əvĕr`ōēz), Arabic Ibn Rushd, 1126–98, Spanish-Arab philosopher.
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, preserved Greek philosophy, especially Aristotelianism, during the period when these teachings were forgotten in Europe.

The Middle Ages to the Nineteenth Century

Scholasticism, the high achievement of medieval philosophy, was based on Aristotelian principles. St. Thomas Aquinas Thomas Aquinas, Saint (əkwī`nəs) [Lat.
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 was the foremost of the schoolmen, just as St. Augustine Augustine, Saint (ô`gəstēn, –tĭn; ôgŭs`tĭn), Lat.
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 was the earlier spokesman for the church of pure belief. The Renaissance Renaissance (rĕnəsäns`, –zäns`) [Fr.
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, with its new physics, astronomy, and humanism, revolutionized philosophic thought. René Descartes Descartes, René (rənā` dākärt`), Lat.
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 is considered the founder of modern philosophy because of his attempt to give the new science a philosophic basis. The other great rationalist systems of the 17th cent., especially those of Baruch Spinoza Spinoza, Baruch or Benedict (spinō`zə)
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 and G. W. von Leibniz Leibniz or Leibnitz, Gottfried Wilhelm, Baron von
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, were developed in response to problems raised by Cartesian philosophy and the new science. In England empiricism empiricism (ĕmpĭr`ĭsĭzəm) [Gr.,=experience], philosophical doctrine that all knowledge is derived from experience.
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 prevailed in the work of Thomas Hobbes Hobbes, Thomas (hŏbz), 1588–1679, English philosopher, grad. Magdalen College, Oxford, 1608.
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, John Locke Locke, John (lŏk), 1632–1704, English philosopher, founder of British empiricism.
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, and David Hume Hume, David (hym), 1711–76, Scottish philosopher and historian.
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, as well as that of George Berkeley Berkeley, George (bär`klē, bûr–), 1685–1753, Anglo-Irish philosopher and clergyman, b. Co. Kilkenny, Ireland.
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, who was the outstanding idealist. The philosophy of Immanuel Kant Kant, Immanuel (ĭmän`
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 achieved a synthesis of the rationalist and empiricist traditions and was in turn developed in the direction of idealism idealism, the attitude that places special value on ideas and ideals as products of the mind, in comparison with the world as perceived through the senses. In art idealism is the tendency to represent things as aesthetic sensibility would have them rather than as
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 by J. G. Fichte Immanuel Hermann von Fichte, 1797–1879, edited Fichte's works, wrote a biography of him, and also did original philosophical work.

Bibliography



See biography by H. E. Engelbrecht (1933, repr. 1968).
..... Click the link for more information. , F. W. J. von Schelling Schelling, Friedrich Wilhelm Joseph von (frē`drĭkh vĭl`hĕlm yō`zĕf fən shĕ`lĭng)
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, and G. W. F. Hegel Hegel, Georg Wilhelm Friedrich (gā`ôrkh vĭl`hĕlm frē`drĭkh hā`gəl)
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.

The romantic movement of the 18th cent. had its beginnings in the philosophy of J. J. Rousseau Rousseau, Jean Jacques (zhäN zhäk r
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; its adherents of the 19th cent. included Arthur Schopenhauer Schopenhauer, Arthur (är`t
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 and Friedrich Nietzsche Nietzsche, Friedrich Wilhelm (frē`drĭkh vĭl`hĕlm nē`chə), 1844–1900, German philosopher, b.
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, as well as the American transcendentalists represented by Ralph Waldo Emerson Emerson, Ralph Waldo (ĕm`ərsən), 1803–82, American poet and essayist, b. Boston.
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. Opposed to the romanticists was the dialectical materialism dialectical materialism, official philosophy of Communism, based on the writings of Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels , as elaborated by G. V. Plekhanov , V. I. Lenin , and Joseph Stalin .
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 of Karl Marx Marx, Karl, 1818–83, German social philosopher, the chief theorist of modern socialism and communism .

Early Life



Marx's father, a lawyer, converted from Judaism to Lutheranism in 1824.
..... Click the link for more information. . The evolutionary theories of Charles Darwin Darwin, Charles Robert, 1809–82, English naturalist, b. Shrewsbury; grandson of Erasmus Darwin and of Josiah Wedgwood . He firmly established the theory of organic evolution known as Darwinism .
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 profoundly affected mid-19th-century thought. Ethical philosophy culminated in England in the utilitarianism utilitarianism (y
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 of John Stuart Mill Mill, John Stuart, 1806–73, British philosopher and economist. A precocious child, he was educated privately by his father, James Mill. In 1823, abandoning the study of law, he became a clerk in the East India company, where he rose to become head of the
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 and in France in the positivism positivism (pŏ`zĭtĭvĭzəm), philosophical doctrine that denies any validity to speculation or metaphysics.
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 of Auguste Comte Comte, Auguste (ōgüst` kôNt)
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. Pragmatism pragmatism (prăg`mətĭzəm)
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, the first essentially American philosophical movement, was founded at the end of the 19th cent. by C. S. Peirce Peirce, Charles Sanders (pûrs), 1839–1914, American philosopher and polymath, b. Cambridge, Mass., grad.
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 and was later elaborated by William James James, William, 1842–1910, American philosopher, b. New York City, M.D. Harvard, 1869; son of the Swedenborgian theologian Henry James and brother of the novelist Henry James .
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 and John Dewey Dewey, John, 1859–1952, American philosopher and educator, b. Burlington, Vt., grad. Univ. of Vermont, 1879, Ph.D. Johns Hopkins, 1884. He taught at the universities of Minnesota (1888–89), Michigan (1884–88, 1889–94), and Chicago
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.

The Twentieth Century

The transition to 20th-century philosophy essentially came with Henri Bergson Bergson, Henri (äNrē` bĕrgsôN`), 1859–1941, French philosopher.
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. The century has often seen a great disparity in orientation between Continental and Anglo-American thinkers. In France and Germany, major philosophical movements have been the phenomenology of Edmund Husserl Husserl, Edmund (ĕt`mnt h
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 and the existentialism of Martin Heidegger Heidegger, Martin (mär`tēn hī`dĕger), 1889–1976, German philosopher.
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 and Jean-Paul Sartre Sartre, Jean-Paul (zhäN-pôl sär`trə), 1905–80, French philosopher, playwright, and novelist.
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. Positivism and science have come under the scrutiny of Jürgen Habermas Habermas, Jürgen (yûr`gən hä`bûrmäs), 1929–, German philosopher. He is a professor at the Univ.
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 of the Frankfurt School Frankfurt School, a group of researchers associated with the Institut für Sozialforschung (Institute of Social Research), founded in 1923 as an autonomous division of the Univ. of Frankfurt.
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; he has argued that they are driven by hidden interests. Structuralism structuralism, theory that uses culturally interconnected signs to reconstruct systems of relationships rather than studying isolated, material things in themselves. This method found wide use from the early 20th cent.
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, a powerful intellectual movement throughout the first half of the 20th cent., defined language and social systems in terms of the relationships among their elements.

Beginning in the 1960s arguments against all of Western metaphysics were marshaled by poststructuralists; among the most influential has been Jacques Derrida Derrida, Jacques (zhäk` dĕr'rēdä`), 1930–2004, French philosopher, b. El Biar, Algeria.
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, a wide-ranging philosopher who has pursued deconstruction deconstruction, in linguistics, philosophy, and literary theory, the exposure and undermining of the metaphysical assumptions involved in systematic attempts to ground knowledge, especially in academic disciplines such as structuralism and semiotics .
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, a program that seeks to identify metaphysical assumptions in literature and psychology as well as philosophy. Both structuralism and poststructuralism originated mostly in France but soon came to influence thinkers throughout the West, especially in Germany and the United States.

Major concerns in American and British philosophy in the 20th cent. have included formal logic, the philosophy of science philosophy of science, branch of philosophy that emerged as an autonomous discipline in the 19th cent., especially through the work of Auguste Comte , J. S. Mill , and William Whewell. Several of the issues in philosophy of science concern science in general.
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, and epistemology. Leading early figures included G. E. Moore Moore, George Edward, 1873–1958, English philosopher, b. Upper Norwood. He was educated at Cambridge, where he was a fellow (1898–1904) and then a lecturer (1911–25) in the department of moral sciences.
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, Bertrand Russell Russell, Bertrand Arthur William Russell, 3d Earl, 1872–1970, British philosopher, mathematician, and social reformer, b. Trelleck, Wales.
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, and Ludwig Wittgenstein Wittgenstein, Ludwig Josef Johann (loŏt`vĭkh yō`zĕf yō`hän vĭt`gənshtīn)
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; Anglo-American philosophy was later exemplified by logical positivists like Rudolph Carnap Carnap, Rudolf (kär`näp, –năp), 1891–1970, German-American philosopher. He taught philosophy at the Univ.
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. In their close attention to problems of language, the logical positivists, influenced by Wittgenstein, in turn influenced the work of W. V. O. Quine Quine, W. V. (Willard Van Orman Quine) (kwīn), 1908–2000, American philosopher and mathematical logician, b. Akron, Ohio, grad.
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 and others in the philosophy of language. Later Anglo-American philosophers turned increasingly toward ethics and political philosophy, as in John Rawls Rawls, John Bordley, 1921–2002, American philosopher and political theorist, b. Baltimore, grad. Princeton (A.B., 1943; Ph.D., 1950). He taught at Princeton (1950–52), Cornell (1953–59), and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (1960–62)
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' work on the problem of justice.

Bibliography

See W. Windelband, A History of Philosophy (2d ed. 1901, repr. 1968); B. Russell, A History of Western Philosophy (rev. ed. 1961); W. K. C. Guthrie, A History of Greek Philosophy (3 vol., 1962–69); A. H. Armstrong, ed., The Cambridge History of Later Greek and Early Medieval Philosophy (1966); J. Passmore, A Hundred Years of Philosophy (2d ed. 1966) and Recent Philosophers (1985); A. Wedberg, A History of Philosophy (3 vol., 1982–84); F. Copleston, A History of Philosophy (9 vol., 1985); D. W. Hamlyn, A History of Western Philosophy (1987); R. Scruton, Modern Philosophy: An Introduction and Survey (1995); E. Craig, ed., Routledge Encyclopedia of Philosophy (1998); P. Hadot, What is Ancient Philosophy (tr. 2002).


philosophy

Critical examination of the rational grounds of our most fundamental beliefs and logical analysis of the basic concepts employed in the expression of such beliefs. Philosophy may also be defined as reflection on the varieties of human experience, or as the rational, methodical, and systematic consideration of the topics that are of greatest concern to humanity. Philosophical inquiry is a central element in the intellectual history of many civilizations. Difficulty in achieving a consensus about the definition of the discipline partly reflects the fact that philosophers have frequently come to it from different fields and have preferred to reflect on different areas of experience. All the world's great religions have produced significant allied philosophical schools. Western philosophers such as Thomas Aquinas, George Berkeley, and Søren Kierkegaard regarded philosophy as a means of defending religion and dispelling the antireligious errors of materialism and rationalism. Pythagoras, René Descartes, and Bertrand Russell, among others, were primarily mathematicians whose views of reality and knowledge were influenced by mathematics. Figures such as Thomas Hobbes, Jean-Jacques Rousseau, and John Stuart Mill were mainly concerned with political philosophy, whereas Socrates and Plato were occupied chiefly by questions in ethics. The Pre-Socratics, Francis Bacon, and Alfred North Whitehead, among many others, started from an interest in the physical composition of the natural world. Other philosophical fields include aesthetics, epistemology, logic, metaphysics, philosophy of mind, and philosophical anthropology. See also analytic philosophy; Continental philosophy; feminist philosophy; philosophy of science.


Philosophy
Aristotle (384–322 B.C.)
eminent Greek philosopher. [Gk. Hist.: NCE, 147]
Confucius (c. 551–479 B.C.)
classic Chinese sage. [Chinese Hist.: NCE, 625]
Plato (427–347 B.C.)
founder of the Academy; author of Republic. [Gk. Hist.: NCE, 2165]
Socrates (469–399 B.c.) Athenian
philosopher, propagated dialectic method of approaching knowledge. [Gk. Hist.: NCE, 2553]

philosophy - See computer ethics, liar paradox, netiquette, proof.

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