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Author Windelband, W. (Wilhelm), 1848-1915.

Uniform Title Geschichte der Philosophie. English
Title A history of philosophy / Wilhelm Windelband ; [translated by James H. Tufts].

Imprint New York : Harper & Brothers, 1958.

Copies

Location Call No. OPAC Message Status
 Axe Special Collections Eucalyptus  180.9 W722g 1958  v.2    ---  Lib Use Only
Description 2 volumes ; 21 cm.
text txt rdacontent
unmediated n rdamedia
volume nc rdacarrier
Series Harper torchbooks ; TB38-39
Note "Reprinted ... from the revised edition of 1901, translated by James H. Tufts."
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references and index.
Language Translated from German.
Contents vol. 1 Greek, Roman, and Medieval --- vol. 2. Renaissance, Enlightenment, and Modern.
Summary The German philosopher and historian of philosophy Wilhelm Windelband was born in Potsdam and educated at Jena, Berlin, and Gottingen. He taught philosophy at Zurich, Freiburg im Breisgau, Strasbourg, and Heidelberg. He was a disciple of Rudolf Hermann Lotze and Kuno Fischer and was the leader of the so-called southwestern German (or Baden) school of neo-Kantianism. He is best known for his work in history of philosophy, to which he brought a new mode of exposition -- the organization of the subject by problems rather than by chronological sequence of individual thinkers. As a systematic philosopher he is remembered for his attempt to extend the principles of Kantian criticism to the historical sciences, his attempt to liberate philosophy from identification with any specific scientific discipline, and his sympathetic appreciation of late nineteenth-century philosophy of value. Windelband believed that whereas the various sciences (mathematical, natural, and historical) have specific objects and limit their investigations to determined areas of the total reality, philosophy finds its unique object in the knowledge of reality provided by these various disciplines taken together as a whole. The task of philosophy, he held, was to explicate the a priori bases of science in general. The aim of philosophy was to show not how science is possible but why there are many different kinds of science; the relationships that obtain between these various sciences; and the nature of the relation between the critical intelligence -- the knowing, willing, and feeling subject -- and consciousness in general.
Subject Philosophy -- History.
Philosophy. (OCoLC)fst01060777
Genre/Form History. (OCoLC)fst01411628
Added Author Tufts, James Hayden, 1862-1942, translator.

 
    
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