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| Preface | p. xi |
| Acknowledgments | p. xiii |
| Descartes and the Rise of Modern Philosophy | p. 1 |
| Background to Descartes' Meditations | p. 2 |
| Descartes' innovations in how philosophy is written | p. 10 |
| Lead-in to the First Meditation | p. 13 |
| The First Meditation | p. 15 |
| The Second Meditation | p. 22 |
| The Third Meditation | p. 32 |
| The Fourth Meditation | p. 38 |
| The Fifth Meditation | p. 47 |
| The Sixth Meditation | p. 59 |
| A summary of Cartesian commitments | p. 66 |
| Topical highlights from Descartes' correspondence | p. 69 |
| Questions about Descartes | p. 71 |
| Transition to the remainder of the book | p. 74 |
| Some recommended books | p. 75 |
| Spinoza | p. 77 |
| Overview of Spinoza's philosophy and life | p. 77 |
| Ethics Part I: On the nature of the universe | p. 80 |
| Ethics Part II: On the nature and origin of the mind | p. 88 |
| Ethics Part III: On the nature and origin of actions and passions | p. 95 |
| Ethics Part IV: On the burdens of human existence and the ways to overcome them | p. 98 |
| Ethics Part V: On the power of reason to liberate us to live blessedly | p. 100 |
| Questions about Spinoza | p. 102 |
| Some recommended books | p. 104 |
| Locke | |
| An overview of Locke's outlook in the Essay | p. 106 |
| Essay Book I: Locke's anti-innatist strategy | p. 109 |
| Essay Book II: Perception as the basis for all thinking | p. 10 |
| Test Case One: Thinking about power | p. 14 |
| Test Case Two: Thinking about substance | p. 116 |
| Test Case Three: Thinking about identity | p. 118 |
| Essay Book III: Expressing thought in language | p. 122 |
| Essay Book IV: Knowledge and opinion | p. 125 |
| Questions about Locke | p. 128 |
| Some recommended books | p. 131 |
| Leibniz | p. 133 |
| Background to Leibniz's philosophy | p. 133 |
| Overview of Leibniz's philosophy | p. 136 |
| How the Discourse on Metaphysics and the Monadology are structured | p. 138 |
| Understanding Leibniz's metaphysics by way of his defense of contingency | p. 141 |
| Understanding the debate about what things for Leibniz are substances | p. 155 |
| Understanding the debate about Leibniz's essentialism | p. 158 |
| Understanding what it means for the world to be the best possible | p. 159 |
| Understanding debates about relations among key Leibnizian theses | p. 164 |
| Space and time as relations among phenomena | p. 166 |
| Key elements of Leibniz's epistemology | p. 169 |
| Questions about Leibniz | p. 171 |
| Some recommended books | p. 173 |
| Berkeley | p. 174 |
| Overview of approach to the Principles | p. 174 |
| Structure of the Principles | p. 176 |
| A fuller analysis of four key arguments | p. 180 |
| Structure of the Three Dialogues | p. 186 |
| A mini-glossary to aid interpretation | p. 189 |
| Questions about Berkeley | p. 190 |
| Some recommended books | p. 191 |
| Hume | p. 193 |
| Main alternatives for interpreting Hume | p. 193 |
| An outline of the first Enquiry | p. 195 |
| Enquiry Sections I-III: Basic principles and materials of the understanding | p. 196 |
| Enquiry Sections IV-VII:The basis for all factual thinking | p. 199 |
| Enquiry Section VIII: Implications for freedom and morality | p. 201 |
| Enquiry Section X: Implications for religion based on miracles | p. 205 |
| Treatise: Overview and key elements of Book I, on the understanding | p. 208 |
| A famous perplexity about how to read Treatise Book I | p. 213 |
| Treatise: Key elements of Book II, on the passions | p. 221 |
| Treatise: Key elements of Book III, on morality | p. 225 |
| Dialogues: Overview and stage-setting Part I | p. 226 |
| Dialogues Parts II-VIII: Design argument for natural religion | p. 230 |
| Dialogues Part IX: Cosmological, a priori proof of theism | p. 232 |
| Dialogues Parts X-XI: Evil as challenge to theism | p. 234 |
| Dialogues Part XII: Guides to deciding Hume's overall message | p. 237 |
| Questions about Hume | p. 238 |
| Some recommended books | p. 242 |
| Kant | p. 244 |
| The central strand of Kant's argument | p. 244 |
| A precis of the Critique of Pure Reason | p. 249 |
| Prefaces and Introduction: Clarifying the project | p. 250 |
| Transcendental Aesthetic: How we receive data | p. 254 |
| Transcendental Analytic: How we understand data | p. 258 |
| Transcendental Dialectic: How we fundamentally misapply thought | p. 278 |
| Exploration of pivotal stages of Kant's argument | p. 291 |
| My general orientation to the Critique | p. 291 |
| A fuller analysis of introductory material | p. 295 |
| A fuller analysis of the Aesthetic | p. 300 |
| A fuller analysis of the Analytic of Concepts | p. 303 |
| A fuller analysis of the Analytic of Principles | p. 312 |
| The transition from the Analytic to the Dialectic | p. 320 |
| A fuller analysis of the Transcendental Dialectic | p. 324 |
| The transition from theoretical to practical philosophy | p. 330 |
| The philosophical foundations for moral theory | p. 333 |
| Kant on philosophical method | p. 342 |
| The Prolegomena's relation to the Critique | p. 343 |
| Questions about Kant | p. 345 |
| Some recommended books | p. 348 |
| Bibliography | p. 353 |
| Index | p. 357 |
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