New and revised edition david-hillel ruben



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A Priori and A PtJ.wm'ori, 4, 27-32, 40-41, gs>, 102-4, 105-8, 110, 117, 133-38, 171-76. 180-82, 207-8 (see also, Interpretation Claim)

Base and Superstructure, 121-23

Causality, 118-25, 130-32, 161-62, 172, 178, 203-6

Conceptual Idealism, 17, 28-30, 31, 34, 40,

  1. 42, 44-49, 49-54, 60n.l0, 67-70, 145-46, 163n, 16

Conceptual Truth, 72, 102-104, 207-8 Correspondence Theory, see Reflection Theory

Creation, see Conceptual Idealism

Deduction and Deductive Arguments, see Transcendental Arguments Dialectics, 47, 118-27, 140n,20, 144, 166-67 Dualism, 73-76, 81-82, 147-48, 162n.7, 184-86, 216

Empiricism, 13, 15, 20 , 26-27 , 96-97, 109, 128, 163n. 16, 170-71, 180-82 Epistemological Consistency, 1-3, 7n.2, 23-27, 32-35, 56, 59-60, 63, 81-82, 87, 148-49, 154, 157-58, 171-74, 217 Essence and Appearance, 113, 127-39, I42n.51, 149-51, 176-80, 186-87 Essential Dependence, 24-26, 28-31, 40,

  1. 44, 63-64, 65-79, 145, 159-60,216-17

Foundationalism, 96-99, 149-51, 176-77

Idealism, 1-2, 22-23, 38-56, 81-83, 96-97, 107-9, 140n. 19, 145-46, 158-62,170-71, 187-88, 191-93 Ideology, 103-4, 112-13, 135-36, 174-75, 193-97

Independence Claim, 17-23, 39-40, 42-43, 56, 58, 64-68, 70-79, 86-87, 96-102, 145 Induction and Inductive Arguments, 107-108, 133-39, 162, 181-82, 193, 208-12

Intellectual intuition, 41-42, 54-56, 218 Internal Relations, 24-26. 28-31, 40, 42-44, 63-64, 65-79. 123, 145, 159-60 Interpretation Claim, 10, 12-17, 24-27, 27-29, 32-34. 42-43, 56, 59. 86-88, 147-49, 171 -76 (see also, A Priori and A Posteriori)

Materialism, 4-5, 6, 21, 22, 32-34, 36n, 12, 36n.22. 36n.23, 59,62n.42,64-65,65-79, 91-92, 106-109,115-16,126-27, 146-47,

  1. 62,188-89,193-97,198n.20, 215-17 Matter, 27-31, 39-40, 47, 66-68, 73, 83-84,

87. 105-106

Naturalism, 96-109, 186 Nature, 48^19, 58, 70-74, 76-77, 79, 83-85, 110, 147

Necessity, 11-12, 42-43, 162, 172-73, 197n. 17

Noumena and Phenomena, 17, 21,24-26,39, 146, 167-68, 171, 179

Passivity, 3, 150-51, 156-57 Phenomenalism, 96-98, 138, 140n.l9, 159, 170-71, 178, 188, 191-93 Positivism, 149-51, 158, 180-82 Pre-Conceptualised Intuitions, 17-23, 39-40 Praxis, 65-66, 76-79, 80-81, 87, 92. 99. 113-17, 118, 122, 126-27, 147-54, 156-57, 161-62

Realism, see
Materialism Reductive Materialism (Vulgar Materialism) 5, 8n.5, 58, 115-17 Reflection Theory, 2, 3-4, 13-14, 56, 59,74, 81-82, 86, 92, 95-96, 144-54, 157-58,

  1. 62, 167, 171-76, 176-87, 201 Reification, 80

Romanticism, 13-14, 125

Scepticism, 99-100, 159-62,183,186, 208-12 Science and Philosophy, 72, 99, 101-102, 102-109, 110, 114-15, 127-29, 141n,22, 163n. 16, 189-93, 193-97 Scientific Realism, 128-39, 158, 176-82, 186-89

Social Conception of Knowledge, 109-13, 154-57, 213-15 Suhject and Object, see Dualism

Theism, 7, 23-24, 34. 42, 49-54, 58, 67-68, 87, 107-108, 146, 191-92, 196-97 Transcendental Arguments. 100-102, 129-33, 141 n.23, 189, 201-07

Unobservables, see Essence and Appearance and Scientific Realism


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