The Story of Philosophy
THE STORY
of
PHILOSOPHY
THE LIVES AND OPINIONS OF
THE GREATER PHILOSOPHERS
By WILL DURANT, Ph. D.
SIMON AND SCHUSTER
NEW YORKMCMXXVI
COPYRIGHT, 1926, BY SIMON AND SCHUSTER, INC.
AND E. HALDEMAN—JULIUS
First Printing, | May, 1926, | 1500 copies |
Second printing, | June, 1926, | 1500 copies |
Third printing, | June, 1926, | 2000 copies |
Fourth printing, | June, 1926, | 2000 copies |
Fifth printing, | June, 1926, | 5000 copies |
Sixth printing, | June, 1926, | 5000 copies |
Seventh printing, | June, 1926, | 5000 copies |
Eighth printing, | August, 1926, | 10,000 copies |
Ninth printing, | August, 1926, | 10,000 copies |
Tenth printing, | August, 1926, | 10,000 copies |
Eleventh printing, | September, 1926, | 10,000 copies |
Twelfth printing, | October, 1926, | 10,000 copies |
Thirteenth printing, | November, 1926, | 25,000 copies |
Fourteenth printing, | November, 1926, | 10,000 copies |
Total printings to date, 107,000 copies. |
Set up, electrotyped, printed and bound by the Vail-Ballou Press, Inc,
Binghamton, N. Y.
TO MY WIFE
Page | ||
---|---|---|
Introduction: On The Uses of Philosophy | 1 | |
CHAPTER I PLATO | ||
I. | The Context of Plato | 7 |
II. | Socrates | 11 |
III. | The Preparation of Plato | 19 |
IV. | The Ethical Problem | 23 |
V. | The Political Problem | 26 |
VI. | The Psychological Problem | 29 |
VII. | The Psychological Solution | 31 |
VIII. | The Political Solution | 40 |
IX. | The Ethical Solution | 47 |
X. | Criticism | 49 |
CHAPTER II ARISTOTLE AND GREEK SCIENCE | ||
I. | The Historical Background | 58 |
II. | The Work of Aristotle | 62 |
III. | The Foundation of Logic | 67 |
IV. | The Organization of Science | 72 |
1.Greek Science before Aristotle | 72 | |
2.Aristotle as a Naturalist | 75 | |
3.The Foundation of Biology | 76 | |
V. | Metaphysics and the Nature of God | 80 |
VI. | Psychology and the Nature of Art | 82 |
VII. | Ethics and the Nature of Happiness | 85 |
VIII. | Politics | 90 |
1.Communism and Conservatism | 90 | |
2.Marriage and Education | 94 | |
3.Democracy and Aristocracy | 98 | |
IX. | Criticism | 101 |
X. | Later Life and Death | 105 |
CHAPTER III FRANCIS BACON | ||
I. | From Aristotle to the Renaissance | 107 |
II. | The Political Career of Francis Bacon | 117 |
III. | The Essays | 122 |
IV. | The Great Reconstruction | 131 |
1.The Advancement of Learning | 133 | |
2.The New Organon | 141 | |
3.The Utopia of Science | 148 | |
V. | Criticism | 152 |
VI. | Epilogue | 158 |
CHAPTER IV SPINOZA | ||
I. | Historical and Biographical | 161 |
1.The Odyssey of the Jews | 161 | |
2.The Education of Spinoza | 164 | |
3.Excommunication | 167 | |
4.Retirement and Death | 170 | |
II. | The Treatise on Religion and the State | 178 |
III. | The Improvement of the Intellect | 182 |
IV. | The Ethics | 185 |
1.Nature and God | 187 | |
2.Matter and Mind | 193 | |
3.Intelligence and Morals | 197 | |
4.Religion and Immortality | 205 | |
V. | The Political Treatise | 208 |
VI. | The Influence of Spinoza | 215 |
CHAPTER V VOLTAIRE AND THE FRENCH ENLIGHTENMENT | ||
I. | Paris: Œdipe | 218 |
II. | London: The Letters on the English | 226 |
III. | Cirey: The Romances | 228 |
IV. | Potsdam and Frederick | 235 |
V. | Les Délices: The Essay on Morals | 240 |
VI. | Ferney: Candide | 244 |
VII. | The Encyclopedia and the Philosophic Dictionary | 251 |
VIII. | Écrasez l'Infame | 257 |
IX. | Voltaire and Rousseau | 266 |
X. | Dénouement | 272 |
CHAPTER VI IMMANUEL KANT AND GERMAN IDEALISM | ||
I. | Roads to Kant | 276 |
1.From Voltaire to Kant | 277 | |
2.From Locke to Kant | 279 | |
3.From Rousseau to Kant | 282 | |
II. | Kant Himself | 285 |
III. | The Critique of Pure Reason | 289 |
1.Transcendental Esthetic | 291 | |
2.Transcendental Analytic | 295 | |
3.Transcendental Dialectic | 296 | |
IV. | The Critique of Practical Reason | 300 |
V. | On Religion and Reason | 303 |
VI. | On Politics and Eternal Peace | 307 |
VII. | Criticism and Estimate | 311 |
VIII. | A Note on Hegel | 317 |
CHAPTER VII SCHOPENHAUER | ||
I. | The Age | 326 |
II. | The Man | 328 |
III. | The World as Idea | 335 |
IV. | The World as Will | 338 |
1.The Will to Live | 338 | |
2.The Will to Reproduce | 345 | |
V. | The World as Evil | 351 |
VI. | The Wisdom of Life | 358 |
1.Philosophy | 358 | |
2.Genius | 363 | |
3.Art | 365 | |
4.Religion | 367 | |
VII. | The Wisdom of Death | 369 |
VIII. | Criticism | 373 |
CHAPTER VIII HERBERT SPENCER | ||
I. | Comte and Darwin | 381 |
II. | The Development of Spencer | 385 |
III. | First Principles | 395 |
1.The Unknowable | 395 | |
2.Evolution | 397 | |
IV. | Biology: The Evolution of Life | 402 |
V. | Psychology: The Evolution of Mind | 405 |
VI. | Sociology: The Evolution of Society | 408 |
VII. | Ethics: The Evolution of Morals | 417 |
VIII. | Criticism | 425 |
1.First Principles | 425 | |
2.Biology and Psychology | 428 | |
3.Sociology and Ethics | 429 | |
IX. | Conclusion | 431 |
CHAPTER IX FRIEDRICH NIETZSCHE | ||
I. | The Lineage of Nietzsche | 435 |
II. | Youth | 437 |
III. | Nietzsche and Wagner | 441 |
IV. | The Song of Zarathustra | 448 |
V. | Hero-morality | 454 |
VI. | The Superman | 461 |
VII. | Decadence | 465 |
VIII. | Aristocracy | 469 |
IX. | Criticism | 476 |
X. | Finale | 484 |
CHAPTER X CONTEMPORARY EUROPEAN PHILOSOPHERS | ||
I. | Henri Bergson | 487 |
1.The Revolt against Materialism | 487 | |
2.Mind and Brain | 490 | |
3.Creative Evolution | 497 | |
4.Criticism | 503 | |
II. | Benedetto Croce | 507 |
1.The Man | 507 | |
2.The Philosophy of the Spirit | 510 | |
3.What is Beauty? | 514 | |
4.Criticism | 516 | |
III. | Bertrand Russell | 518 |
1.The Logician | 518 | |
2.The Reformer | 523 | |
3.Epilogue | 526 | |
CHAPTER XI CONTEMPORARY AMERICAN PHILOSOPHERS | ||
Introduction | 530 | |
I. | George Santayana | 532 |
1.Biographical | 532 | |
2.Scepticism and Animal Faith | 534 | |
3.Reason in Science | 536 | |
4.Reason in Religion | 540 | |
5.Reason in Society | 544 | |
6.Comment | 550 | |
II. | William James | 553 |
1.Personal | 553 | |
2.Pragmatism | 555 | |
3.Pluralism | 558 | |
4.Comment | 564 | |
III. | John Dewey | 565 |
1.Education | 565 | |
2.Instrumentalism | 568 | |
3.Science and Politics | 571 | |
Conclusion | 576 | |
Index | 579 | |
Glossary | 587 |
Socrates | Frontispiece | |
Plato | 7 | |
Aristotle | 62 | |
Francis Bacon | 118 | |
Spinoza | 164 | |
Voltaire | 218 | |
John Locke | 279 | |
Jean Jacques Rousseau | 283 | |
Immanuel Kant | 285 | |
G. W. F. Hegel | 318 | |
Arthur Schopenhauer | 329 | |
Auguste Comte | 381 | |
Herbert Spencer | 395 | |
Friedrich Nietzsche | 438 | |
Henri Bergson | 488 | |
Benedetto Croce | 507 | |
Bertrand Russell | 518 | |
George Santayana | 532 | |
William James | 554 | |
John Dewey | 566 | |
Table of Philosophic Affiliations | 110 and 111 |
TO THE READER
This book is not a complete history of philosophy. It is an attempt to humanize knowledge by centering the story of speculative thought around certain dominant personalities. Certain lesser figures have been omitted in order that those selected might have the space required to make them live. Hence the inadequate treatment of the half-legendary pre-Socratics, the Stoics and Epicureans, the Scholastics, and the epistemologists. The author believes that epistemology has kidnapped modern philosophy, and well nigh ruined it; he hopes for the time when the study of the knowledge-process will be recognized as the business of the science of psychology, and when philosophy will again be understood as the synthetic interpretation of all experience rather than the analytic description of the mode and process of experience itself. Analysis belongs to science, and gives us knowledge; philosophy must provide a synthesis for wisdom.
The author would like to record here a debt which he can never repay, to Alden Freeman, who gave him education, travel, and the inspiration of a noble and enlightened life. May this best of friends find in these pages—incidental and imperfect though they are—something not quite unworthy of his generosity and his faith.
Will Durant
New York, 1926.
This work is in the public domain in the United States because it was published before January 1, 1930.
The longest-living author of this work died in 1981, so this work is in the public domain in countries and areas where the copyright term is the author's life plus 43 years or less. This work may be in the public domain in countries and areas with longer native copyright terms that apply the rule of the shorter term to foreign works.
Public domainPublic domainfalsefalse