Preface. Acknowledgments.
Part I: What Can We Know?.
Introduction.
1. René Descartes, From Meditations On First Philosophy.
2. David Hume, From An Enquiry Concerning Human Understanding.
3. Jonathan Vogel, ?Cartesian Skepticism And Inference To The Best
Explanation?.
4. Helen Longino, From Science As Social Knowledge.
5. Charles W. Mills, ?Alternative Epistemologies?.
6. Genevieve Lloyd, From The Man Of Reason.
7. W. K. Clifford, ?The Ethics Of Belief?.
8. Peter Van Inwagen, ?It Is Wrong, Everywhere, Always, And For
Anyone, To Believe Anything Upon Insufficient Evidence?.
Part II: What Can We Know About The Nature And Existence Of
God?.
Introduction.
9. St. Anselm, From Proslogium.
10. Gaunilon, ?Reply To Anselm?.
11. William L. Rowe, ?The Ontological Argument?.
12. William L. Rowe, ?The Cosmological Argument?.
13. David Hume, From Dialogues Concerning Natural Religion.
14. R. G. Swinburne, ?The Argument From Design?.
15. Blaise Pascal, ?The Wager?.
16. Stephen P. Stich, ?The Recombinant DNA Debate: A Difficulty For
Pascalian-Style Wagering?.
17. George Schlesinger, ?A Central Theistic Argument?.
18. J. L. Mackie, ?Evil And Omnipotence?.
19. Eleonore Stump, ?The Problem Of Evil?.
20. Deborah Mathieu, ?Male-Chauvinist Religion?.
21. William R. Jones, From ?Is God A White Racist??.
Part III: Are We Ever Free?.
Introduction.
22. Paul Holbach, From The System Of Nature.
23. A. J. Ayer, ?Freedom And Necessity?.
24. Roderick M. Chisolm, ?Human Freedom And The Self?.
25. Harry G. Frankfurt, ?Freedom Of The Will And The Concept Of A
Person?.
26. James P. Sterba And Janet Kourany, ?How To Complete The
Compatibilist Account Of Free Action?.
27. Derk Pereboom, ?Living Without Free Will: The Case For Hard
Incompatibilism?.
28. Richard Double, ?Metaethics, Metaphilosophy, And Free Will
Subjectivism?.
Part IV: Does Our Existence Have A Meaning Or Purpose?.
Introduction.
29. Leo Tolstoy, From My Confession.
30. William Lane Craig, ?The Absurdity Of Life Without God?.
31. Arthur Schopenhauer, ?On The Vanity Of Existence?.
32. Albert Camus, From The Myth Of Sisyphus.
33. Jean-Paul Sartre, ?Existentialism Is A Humanism?.
34. Thomas Nagel, ?The Absurd?.
35. Owen Flanagan, ?What Makes Life Worth Living??.
36. John Kekes, ?The Meaning Of Life?.
37. Antony Flew, ?Tolstoi And The Meaning Of Life?.
Part V: How Should We Live?.
Introduction.
38. Plato, ?Morality As Good In Itself?.
39. James P. Sterba, ?Morality And Rationality?.
40. John Stuart Mill, From Utilitarianism.
41. Immanuel Kant, ?Fundamental Principles Of The Metaphysic Of
Morals?.
42. John Locke, ?Of The State Of Nature?.
43. John Rawls, From A Theory Of Justice.
44. Robert Nozick, From Anarchy, State, And Utopia.
45. Ruth Sample, ?Why Feminist Contractarianism??.
46. Susan Moller Okin, ?Gender Inequality And Cultural
Difference?.
47. Jane Flax, ?Race/Gender, And The Ethics Of Difference?.
48. Susan Moller Okin, ?A Response To Jane Flax?.
49. Bernard Boxill, ?Equality, Discrimination, And Preferential
Treatment?.
50. Peter Singer, ?All Animals Are Equal?.
51. Paul W. Taylor, ?The Ethics Of Respect For Nature?.
52. James P. Sterba, ?Morality As A Compromise Between
Anthropocentrism And Non-Anthropocentrism?.
Index
Ruth J. Sample is Associate Professor of Philosophy at the
University of New Hampshire. She teaches social and political
philosophy, early modern philosophy, and feminist philosophy, and
is the author of Exploitation: What It Is and Why It’s Wrong
(2003).
Charles W. Mills is Professor of Philosophy at the University of
Illinois at Chicago. He works in the area of oppositional political
theory and is the author of three books: The Racial Contract
(1997), Blackness Visible: Essays on Philosophy and Race (1998),
and From Class to Race: Essays in White Marxism and Black
Radicalism (2003).
James P. Sterba is Professor of Philosophy at the University of
Notre Dame, Indiana, where he teaches ethics and political
philosophy. His publications include How to Make People Just
(1988), Feminist Philosophies (2nd edn., 1995), Justice for Here
and Now (1998), Earth Ethics (2nd edn., 2000), Three Challenges to
Ethics (2001),and Morality in Practice (7th edn., 2003).
"This is an extraordinary rich and refreshing collection of essays
that brings together some of the most illuminating and provocative
essays to be found in philosophy. This volume reveals the majesty
of philosophy while, at the same time, showcasing the diversity and
creativity that has made philosophy so appealing to the very best
minds. I expect this reader to become a classic text." Laurence
Thomas, Syracuse University
"This marvelous collection of readings from the Western tradition
draws judiciously both from classic texts and contemporary authors.
Reminding us of the basic importance for all human life of the
central questions of philosophy, it orms an excellent introduction
to the subject." Roger Trigg, University of Warwick
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