Williams - Part 5 : Documents and materials -Unpublished letter from Whitehead to Hartshorne (1936) - Corrigenda for process and reality -Contributors - IndexĪccess-restricted-item true Addeddate 07:01:33 Associated-names Kline, George L. Sherburne - Moral obligation in process philosophy / Daniel D. Rorty - Organic categories in Whitehead / Gregory Vlastos - Part 4 : Ethics, aesthetics, and philosophical theology - Vision of beauty and the temporality of deity in Whitehead's philosophy / Nathaniel Lawrence - Responsibility, punishment, and Whitehead's theory of the self / Donald W. Hall - Whitehead and the problem of extension / Ivor Leclerc - Concept of experience in Whitehead's metaphysics / Victor Lowe - Subjectivist principle and the linguistic turn / Richard M. Christian - Of what use are Whitehead's eternal objects? / Everett W. Chappell - Whitehead's theory of prehensions / Lucio Chiaraviglio - Whitehead's explanation of the past / William A. Gross - Whitehead's theory of becoming / V.C. Robson - Whitehead's answer to Hume: a reply / Mason W. Palter - Part 3 : Metaphysics and cosmology - Whitehead's answer to Hume / J.W. Norman - Place of mathematics in Whitehead's philosophy / Robert M. Kline - Part 1 : Whitehead as man and thinker - Whitehead as I knew him / William Ernest Hocking - Whitehead's novel intuition / Charles Hartshorne - Part 2 : Logic, mathematics, and methodology - Algebra of logic and the theory of deduction / Hugues Leblanc - Whitehead and mathematicism / Ralph V. Includes bibliographical references and index Christian, Sr., Nathaniel Lawrence, Ivor Leclerc, Victor Lowe, Robert M. Some of the distinguished philosophers contributing to this volume are: Charles Hartshorne, William Ernest Hocking, Richard M. They delineate Whitehead's indebtedness to and divergence from the philosophic traditions of Plato, Leibniz, Hume, Hegel, Bergson and others. They manage to avoid the twin pitfalls of uncritical acceptance and impatient rejection of Whitehead's thought. Eighteen distinguished contributors follow Whitehead in his unique attempt to integrate the often disparate concerns of science (including mathematics and mathematical logic), art, religion, social life and common sense. Synopsis: This volume's aim is to clarify, criticize and theoretically develop some of Whitehead's major philosophic ideas and insights.
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