Chapter 7 of 33 · 186 words · ~1 min read

CHAPTER VI

. METAPHYSICS AND EPISTEMOLOGY 149

Sect. 55. The Impossibility of an Absolute Division of the Problem of Philosophy 149 Sect. 56. The Dependence of the Order of Philosophical Problems upon the Initial Interest 152 Sect. 57. Philosophy as the Interpretation of Life 152 Sect. 58. Philosophy as the Extension of Science 154 Sect. 59. The Historical Differentiation of the Philosophical Problem 155 Sect. 60. Metaphysics Seeks a Most Fundamental Conception 157 Sect. 61. Monism and Pluralism 159 Sect. 62. Ontology and Cosmology Concern Being and Process 159 Sect. 63. Mechanical and Teleological Cosmologies 160 Sect. 64. Dualism 162 Sect. 65. The New Meaning of Monism and Pluralism 163 Sect. 66. Epistemology Seeks to Understand the Possibility of Knowledge 164 Sect. 67. Scepticism, Dogmatism, and Agnosticism 166 Sect. 68. The Source and Criterion of Knowledge according to Empiricism and Rationalism. Mysticism 168 Sect. 69. The Relation of Knowledge to its Object according to Realism, and the Representative Theory 172 Sect. 70. The Relation of Knowledge to its Object according to Idealism 175 Sect. 71. Phenomenalism, Spiritualism, and Panpsychism 176 Sect. 72. Transcendentalism, or Absolute Idealism 177

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