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Some Problems of Philosophy
Harvard University Press, 1979 Cloth: 978-0-674-82035-7 Library of Congress Classification B945.J23S6 1979 Dewey Decimal Classification 110
ABOUT THIS BOOK
ABOUT THIS BOOK
Some Problems of Philosophy, William James's last book, was published after his death in 1910. For years he had talked of rounding out his philosophical work with a treatise on metaphysics. Characteristically, he chose to do so in the form of an introduction to the problems of philosophy, because writing for beginners would force him to be nontechnical and readable. The result is that, although this is James's most systematic and abstract work, it has all the lucidity of his other, more popular writings. Step by step the reader is introduced, through analysis of the fundamental problems of Being, the relation of thoughts to things, novelty, causation, and the Infinite, to the original philosophical synthesis that James called radical empiricism. See other books on: Burkhardt, Frederick | James, William | Philosophy See other titles from Harvard University Press |
Nearby on shelf for Philosophy (General) / By period / Modern:
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