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- catalog contributor b3222235.
- catalog created "[1950]".
- catalog date "1950".
- catalog date "[1950]".
- catalog dateCopyrighted "[1950]".
- catalog description "(2) Modern science in conflict -- Eight philosophies of certainty -- (3) Scientific procedure and instrumentalism -- Two degrees of control, astronomy -- Greek attitude toward material nature -- "Data" substituted for "objects" -- Events -- Knowing by doing -- Dobzhansky on science and certainty -- Bridgman -- Eddington -- Bridgman and Newton -- "Experimental empiricism" -- Dewey on Newton, hypotheses -- Descarte's rationalism -- Newton's theory of atoms -- Dewey on Newton's view of time and space -- Dewey and Einstein -- Einstein on Euclid -- The Heisenberg principle and Newton -- Laplace -- The principle of indeterminacy -- Three a priori negatives -- Truth and falsehood reversible -- The unconscious normative -- (4) Destruction of barriers between theory and practice -- (5) Effect of instrumentalism -- Revelation and incarnation -- Dewey's Copernican revolution -- The intellectualist's fallacy -- The problem of evil -- Religion and fact -- Logic, the theory of inquiry -- ".
- catalog description "Chapter 3: Tennant's metaphysical conclusions -- Tennant's metaphysics, general statement -- Generalizations -- Is the world rational? -- Does man legislate for nature? -- Underwood on curved space -- Lamont on dimensionalism -- Meaning of "law" -- "Logical" necessity -- Law as self-subsistent -- Ontological necessity -- Law and mechanism -- Philosophical meaning of discontinuity -- Vis a tergo -- Explanation, rationality of the world -- Zecjmässigkeit ohne Zweck -- Cosmic teleology -- The ontological argument -- Anslem -- Descartes -- Leibnitz -- Kant -- Tennant on the ontological argument -- Teleology, general approach -- Rational mind and the ontal world -- Teleology in organisms -- Teleology in inorganic world -- Teleology in aesthetics -- Ethical teleology -- Synthetic view -- The nature of God -- Creation -- Time -- The infinitude of God -- Calvinistic use of "infinite" -- Perfection and immutability -- The view of Thomas Aquinas -- Thomas on immutability -- ".
- catalog description "Chapter 4: Dewey's psychology -- Dewey and Allport in the Schilpp volume -- Earliest period in Dewey's psychology -- Articles in mind -- Articles in Bibliotheca Sacra -- Article in Andover Review -- The causal and the occasional -- An example of Dewey's Hegelianism -- "The reflex arc concept in psychology" -- Dewey's changing view of the personal ego -- Dewey's article, "The vanishing subject... of William James" -- Dewey's article, "The ego as cause" -- Attempts to account for Erlebnis -- Dewey's five steps, conclusion -- The psychology of Human nature and conduct -- Conclusions -- Chapter 5: Dewey's epistemology -- Overlapping of epistemology and ontology -- Relation of logic to Dewey's earlier writings -- The quest for certainty -- Dewey's use of Aristotle -- Primitive cultural anthropology -- Discovery of antecedent facts and principles, the zero sign -- The all or none device -- Five-fold development of Quest -- (1) Separation between theory and practice -- ".
- catalog description "Includes bibliographies.".
- catalog description "Logical inquiry, the cause of logical forms -- Ab extra -- Dewey on Peirce -- Three kinds of relation -- Dewey on paper money -- Necessary logical relationships -- Theory of relativity -- Carelessness -- Conclusion -- Chapter 6: Dewey's metaphysics -- General introduction; Garnett -- Experience and nature -- Interdict against nouns -- Causality -- Historismus -- Woodbridge on Dewey's view of history -- "Experience" and "house" -- Subjects and objects -- Definition of consciousness -- Dewey's vitalism (animism) -- Carelessness -- Art as experience -- Vitalism -- A common faith -- Anti-supernaturalism -- Anti-materialism -- Lamprecht and Flint -- Verifiable reality -- Liberalism and fundamentalism -- Three stages of history -- The problem of evil -- God and atheism -- The religious and religions -- God or no God -- Ignorance of church history -- Dewey's creed that cannot be shaken -- Summary and conclusion -- Negatives -- The positive -- Summary, conclusions and recommendations -- ".
- catalog description "Preface -- The problem stated -- Definitions of general terms -- Empiricism, empirical -- Experience -- Pragmatism -- Tennant and Dewey -- Specialized terms -- Conclusion -- Part I: Analytical summary of tenants empiricism -- Introduction: Tennant's general position in philosophy -- Horton and Macintosh on Tennant -- Bertocci and Scudder on Tennant -- Chapter 1: Tennant's psychological genetic approach to knowledge -- Prima facie facts -- The order of knowing -- James Ward's psychology -- Tennant's atomism -- Tennant's sensationalism -- Associationism, detailed analysis of Tennant's psychology -- The "subject" of Tennant's psychology -- Erlebnis -- Hume on the "self" -- Tennant's dualism -- Development of genetic psychology -- Bode's view of the self -- Summary -- Conclusions -- Appendix A: Bode's view of the soul -- Chapter 2: Tennant's view of the nature of knowledge: phenomenalism -- Epistemology -- Transitional -- The categories; Aristotle -- ".
- catalog description "Summary -- Summary, psychology -- Summary, epistemology -- Summary, metaphysics -- Conclusion, psychology -- Conclusion, epistemology -- Conclusion, metaphysics -- Recommendations for further research.".
- catalog description "Time and space, confusion and definition -- Augustine's view -- Definitions of time and space -- Categories of the understanding -- "Real" categories -- Substance -- Aristotle on matter and substance -- Tennant's dualism -- Thought and reason -- Theories of knowledge, rationalism -- Theories of knowledge, empiricism -- Theories of knowledge, realism, idealism, phenomenalism -- Tennant's symbols -- Tennant's phenomenalism compared with other systems -- Relativity of knowledge -- Tennant's use of phenomenalism -- Induction -- Probability -- The nature of belief -- Tennant as a theologian -- Summary of The nature of belief -- Tennant on the nature of religious experience -- Bertocci on Tennant's view of mysticism -- Hook on religious experience Scudder on Tennant's doctrine of religious experience -- Conclusion -- The nature and limitations of scientific knowledge -- Conclusion; Tennant's epistemology in general -- Appendix B: Epistemological categories, suggested; outline -- ".
- catalog description "Transitional summary -- The absolute -- Personality -- Trinity -- Tennant on polytheism -- Omniscience -- The fact of evil -- "Best possible" -- Application -- Immanence -- Miracle -- Revelation -- Incarnation -- Conclusion -- Part II: Analytical summary of Dewey's empiricism -- Introduction: delimitations, not a study of Dewey's philosophy as a whole".
- catalog extent "xvii, 516 p.".
- catalog hasFormat "Philosophies of F.R. Tennant and John Dewey.".
- catalog isFormatOf "Philosophies of F.R. Tennant and John Dewey.".
- catalog issued "1950".
- catalog issued "[1950]".
- catalog language "eng".
- catalog publisher "New York, Philosophical Library".
- catalog relation "Philosophies of F.R. Tennant and John Dewey.".
- catalog subject "191.9".
- catalog subject "B1669.T44 B8".
- catalog subject "Dewey, John, 1859-1952.".
- catalog subject "Knowledge, Theory of.".
- catalog subject "Tennant, Frederick Robert, 1866-1957.".
- catalog tableOfContents "(2) Modern science in conflict -- Eight philosophies of certainty -- (3) Scientific procedure and instrumentalism -- Two degrees of control, astronomy -- Greek attitude toward material nature -- "Data" substituted for "objects" -- Events -- Knowing by doing -- Dobzhansky on science and certainty -- Bridgman -- Eddington -- Bridgman and Newton -- "Experimental empiricism" -- Dewey on Newton, hypotheses -- Descarte's rationalism -- Newton's theory of atoms -- Dewey on Newton's view of time and space -- Dewey and Einstein -- Einstein on Euclid -- The Heisenberg principle and Newton -- Laplace -- The principle of indeterminacy -- Three a priori negatives -- Truth and falsehood reversible -- The unconscious normative -- (4) Destruction of barriers between theory and practice -- (5) Effect of instrumentalism -- Revelation and incarnation -- Dewey's Copernican revolution -- The intellectualist's fallacy -- The problem of evil -- Religion and fact -- Logic, the theory of inquiry -- ".
- catalog tableOfContents "Chapter 3: Tennant's metaphysical conclusions -- Tennant's metaphysics, general statement -- Generalizations -- Is the world rational? -- Does man legislate for nature? -- Underwood on curved space -- Lamont on dimensionalism -- Meaning of "law" -- "Logical" necessity -- Law as self-subsistent -- Ontological necessity -- Law and mechanism -- Philosophical meaning of discontinuity -- Vis a tergo -- Explanation, rationality of the world -- Zecjmässigkeit ohne Zweck -- Cosmic teleology -- The ontological argument -- Anslem -- Descartes -- Leibnitz -- Kant -- Tennant on the ontological argument -- Teleology, general approach -- Rational mind and the ontal world -- Teleology in organisms -- Teleology in inorganic world -- Teleology in aesthetics -- Ethical teleology -- Synthetic view -- The nature of God -- Creation -- Time -- The infinitude of God -- Calvinistic use of "infinite" -- Perfection and immutability -- The view of Thomas Aquinas -- Thomas on immutability -- ".
- catalog tableOfContents "Chapter 4: Dewey's psychology -- Dewey and Allport in the Schilpp volume -- Earliest period in Dewey's psychology -- Articles in mind -- Articles in Bibliotheca Sacra -- Article in Andover Review -- The causal and the occasional -- An example of Dewey's Hegelianism -- "The reflex arc concept in psychology" -- Dewey's changing view of the personal ego -- Dewey's article, "The vanishing subject... of William James" -- Dewey's article, "The ego as cause" -- Attempts to account for Erlebnis -- Dewey's five steps, conclusion -- The psychology of Human nature and conduct -- Conclusions -- Chapter 5: Dewey's epistemology -- Overlapping of epistemology and ontology -- Relation of logic to Dewey's earlier writings -- The quest for certainty -- Dewey's use of Aristotle -- Primitive cultural anthropology -- Discovery of antecedent facts and principles, the zero sign -- The all or none device -- Five-fold development of Quest -- (1) Separation between theory and practice -- ".
- catalog tableOfContents "Logical inquiry, the cause of logical forms -- Ab extra -- Dewey on Peirce -- Three kinds of relation -- Dewey on paper money -- Necessary logical relationships -- Theory of relativity -- Carelessness -- Conclusion -- Chapter 6: Dewey's metaphysics -- General introduction; Garnett -- Experience and nature -- Interdict against nouns -- Causality -- Historismus -- Woodbridge on Dewey's view of history -- "Experience" and "house" -- Subjects and objects -- Definition of consciousness -- Dewey's vitalism (animism) -- Carelessness -- Art as experience -- Vitalism -- A common faith -- Anti-supernaturalism -- Anti-materialism -- Lamprecht and Flint -- Verifiable reality -- Liberalism and fundamentalism -- Three stages of history -- The problem of evil -- God and atheism -- The religious and religions -- God or no God -- Ignorance of church history -- Dewey's creed that cannot be shaken -- Summary and conclusion -- Negatives -- The positive -- Summary, conclusions and recommendations -- ".
- catalog tableOfContents "Preface -- The problem stated -- Definitions of general terms -- Empiricism, empirical -- Experience -- Pragmatism -- Tennant and Dewey -- Specialized terms -- Conclusion -- Part I: Analytical summary of tenants empiricism -- Introduction: Tennant's general position in philosophy -- Horton and Macintosh on Tennant -- Bertocci and Scudder on Tennant -- Chapter 1: Tennant's psychological genetic approach to knowledge -- Prima facie facts -- The order of knowing -- James Ward's psychology -- Tennant's atomism -- Tennant's sensationalism -- Associationism, detailed analysis of Tennant's psychology -- The "subject" of Tennant's psychology -- Erlebnis -- Hume on the "self" -- Tennant's dualism -- Development of genetic psychology -- Bode's view of the self -- Summary -- Conclusions -- Appendix A: Bode's view of the soul -- Chapter 2: Tennant's view of the nature of knowledge: phenomenalism -- Epistemology -- Transitional -- The categories; Aristotle -- ".
- catalog tableOfContents "Summary -- Summary, psychology -- Summary, epistemology -- Summary, metaphysics -- Conclusion, psychology -- Conclusion, epistemology -- Conclusion, metaphysics -- Recommendations for further research.".
- catalog tableOfContents "Time and space, confusion and definition -- Augustine's view -- Definitions of time and space -- Categories of the understanding -- "Real" categories -- Substance -- Aristotle on matter and substance -- Tennant's dualism -- Thought and reason -- Theories of knowledge, rationalism -- Theories of knowledge, empiricism -- Theories of knowledge, realism, idealism, phenomenalism -- Tennant's symbols -- Tennant's phenomenalism compared with other systems -- Relativity of knowledge -- Tennant's use of phenomenalism -- Induction -- Probability -- The nature of belief -- Tennant as a theologian -- Summary of The nature of belief -- Tennant on the nature of religious experience -- Bertocci on Tennant's view of mysticism -- Hook on religious experience Scudder on Tennant's doctrine of religious experience -- Conclusion -- The nature and limitations of scientific knowledge -- Conclusion; Tennant's epistemology in general -- Appendix B: Epistemological categories, suggested; outline -- ".
- catalog tableOfContents "Transitional summary -- The absolute -- Personality -- Trinity -- Tennant on polytheism -- Omniscience -- The fact of evil -- "Best possible" -- Application -- Immanence -- Miracle -- Revelation -- Incarnation -- Conclusion -- Part II: Analytical summary of Dewey's empiricism -- Introduction: delimitations, not a study of Dewey's philosophy as a whole".
- catalog title "The philosophies of F. R. Tennant and John Dewey.".
- catalog type "text".