The First Task of the Philosophy of Nature-The Problem of Elementarily | p. 1 |
Biographical Notes | p. 4 |
Appendix: How Critical Thought Transformed the Ancient Picture of the World | p. 4 |
The Philosophical Myth of Creation-The Platonic Philosophy of Nature | p. 7 |
Ideas and Their Shadows | p. 7 |
Becoming and Being | p. 9 |
The Prototype of the Concept of Space | p. 10 |
Time: The Moving Image of Eternity | p. 11 |
Symmetries | p. 12 |
The Achievements of the Platonic Philosophy of Nature | p. 13 |
Biographical Notes | p. 14 |
Appendix: Platonism's "Ideas" in the History of Western Philosophy | p. 14 |
Aristotle's Physics | p. 17 |
Introduction: From the World of Ideas to Individual Objects | p. 17 |
The Ontological Point of View | p. 18 |
The Point of View of Physics | p. 20 |
A Philosophy of Change | p. 22 |
The Theory of Hylomorphism | p. 23 |
The Principles of Aristotle's Dynamics | p. 24 |
The Significance of Aristotle's Physics | p. 26 |
Biographical Notes | p. 27 |
Appendix: Aristotelianism and Platonism-The Rivalry of Systems | p. 28 |
Aristotle's Method of Cosmological Speculation | p. 31 |
Appendix: Ancient Ideas About the Structure of the Universe | p. 35 |
Descartes' Mechanism | p. 37 |
The Road to the Empirical Method | p. 37 |
The Geometrical Mechanics of Descartes | p. 38 |
The Geometrical Mechanism of Descartes | p. 39 |
In the Context of System | p. 41 |
Biographical Notes | p. 41 |
Appendix: The Philosophy of Nature from the Middle Ages to Modern Times | p. 43 |
Isaac Newton and the Mathematical Principles of Natural Philosophy | p. 47 |
Introduction: Towards a New Method | p. 47 |
Newton's Introduction to the Principia | p. 49 |
Rules of Reasoning in Philosophy | p. 53 |
The Scholium | p. 55 |
Biographical Notes | p. 58 |
Appendix: The Mechanistic Image of the World in Newton's Principia | p. 59 |
The World of Leibniz: The Best of All Possible Worlds | p. 61 |
Leibniz and Descartes: A Contrast | p. 61 |
The Logic of God and the Logic of the World | p. 62 |
The World of Substances | p. 63 |
Teleology of the World | p. 65 |
From Metaphysical Dynamics to Physical Dynamics | p. 66 |
The Relational Theory of Space and Time | p. 68 |
Biographical Notes | p. 70 |
Appendix: The Leibniz-Clarke Debate | p. 70 |
Immanuel Kant: The A Priori Conditions of the Sciences | p. 73 |
The Fundamental Question: How Are the Sciences Possible? | p. 73 |
Synthetic A Priori Judgments | p. 74 |
How Is Pure Mathematics Possible? The Categories of Space and Time | p. 75 |
How Is a Pure Science of Nature Possible? | p. 78 |
The Boundaries of Philosophy | p. 79 |
A Critique of the Kantian Critique | p. 80 |
Biographical Notes | p. 83 |
Appendix: The Kant-Laplace Cosmological Hypothesis | p. 83 |
The Romantic Philosophy of Nature | p. 85 |
Introduction: From Mysticism to Idealism | p. 85 |
The Mysticism of Being | p. 86 |
Fichte: The Romantic Theory of Science | p. 88 |
Schilling's Speculative Physics | p. 89 |
A Philosophical Science of Nature | p. 90 |
The Debate About Hegel | p. 92 |
Evaluation and Conclusions | p. 95 |
Biographical Notes | p. 97 |
Appendix: Romanticism in Poland-Between Philosophy and Literature | p. 98 |
The Cosmology of Whitehead: The Universe as Process | p. 101 |
Sources of the Great System | p. 101 |
Speculative Philosophy and the Empirical Sciences | p. 102 |
The Conception of Nature | p. 104 |
The Theory of the Bifurcation of Nature and Its Critique | p. 105 |
Space and Time | p. 107 |
The Metaphysics of Process | p. 108 |
Some Remarks in Conclusion | p. 110 |
Biographical Notes | p. 111 |
Appendix: Process Philosophy and Its Continuation in Modern Thought | p. 111 |
Popper's Open Universe | p. 113 |
The General Outline of Popper's Thought | p. 113 |
Popper's Intellectual Morality | p. 114 |
Antiessentialism and the Defense of Philosophy | p. 117 |
Popper's Three Worlds | p. 118 |
Popper's Philosophical and Cosmological Indeterminism | p. 119 |
The Metaphysics of Probabilities | p. 122 |
The Strategy of Evolution | p. 123 |
Concluding Remarks | p. 124 |
Biographical Notes | p. 125 |
Appendix: The Influence of Popper's Thought on Contemporary Philosophy of Science | p. 125 |
Science as Philosophy | p. 129 |
From Science to Philosophy | p. 129 |
Mechanism and Its Fall | p. 130 |
Philosophical Problems of the Theory of Relativity | p. 133 |
Philosophical Problems of Quantum Mechanics | p. 141 |
The Philosophical Problems of the Unification of Physics | p. 144 |
Biographical Notes | p. 147 |
Appendix: The Dream of Unity-A Sketch of the Philosophy of Science of Albert Einstein | p. 148 |
Problems and Methods of the Philosophy of Nature | p. 153 |
The Growth of Criticism | p. 153 |
The Existence of the Philosophy of Nature | p. 155 |
The Rationality of the World | p. 158 |
The Debate About Substance | p. 162 |
Other Problems of the Philosophy of Nature | p. 164 |
Biographical Notes | p. 165 |
Appendix: Various Conceptions of the Philosophy of Nature | p. 166 |
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