Determinism and Freewill [electronic resource] : Anthony Collins’ A Philosophical Inquiry Concerning Human Liberty /

The Philosophical Inquiry concerning Human Liberty of Anthony Collins' was considered by Joseph Priestley and Voltaire to be the best book written on freewill up to their own time. Priestley admitted that it convert­ ed him to determinism and it had a powerful effect on Voltaire in the same direction. It seems important to place in its wider historical context a book which so influenced such men and which greatly impressed the philosophes in general. Therefore - and because such an account has value in itself - the Introduction contains a survey of the freewill controversy from the time of Hobbes to that of Leibniz, giving in some detail the opinions of Hobbes, Locke, Pierre Bayle, William King, Archbishop of Dublin, and Leibniz and an account of the Scholastic doctrine of liberty of indifference - opinions which either influenced Collins or against which he reacted. The value and originality of Collins' works need assessing. He was also at times liable to misinterpret or misunderstand the authorities he quoted. I have, therefore, subjected the Inquiry to a detailed critique. This also gives cross-references to parallel passages in Collins' works and those of the authors who influenced him, and, by discussing the philosophical and theological questions to which his writings give rise, obviates the need for a good many footnotes in the notes that follow the text.

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Main Authors: O’higgins, J. editor., SpringerLink (Online service)
Format: Texto biblioteca
Language:eng
Published: Dordrecht : Springer Netherlands, 1976
Subjects:Philosophy., Ethics., Philosophy of mind., Philosophy and science., Philosophy of Mind., Philosophy of Science.,
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-94-010-1368-0
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spelling KOHA-OAI-TEST:1916532018-07-30T23:16:18ZDeterminism and Freewill [electronic resource] : Anthony Collins’ A Philosophical Inquiry Concerning Human Liberty / O’higgins, J. editor. SpringerLink (Online service) textDordrecht : Springer Netherlands,1976.engThe Philosophical Inquiry concerning Human Liberty of Anthony Collins' was considered by Joseph Priestley and Voltaire to be the best book written on freewill up to their own time. Priestley admitted that it convert­ ed him to determinism and it had a powerful effect on Voltaire in the same direction. It seems important to place in its wider historical context a book which so influenced such men and which greatly impressed the philosophes in general. Therefore - and because such an account has value in itself - the Introduction contains a survey of the freewill controversy from the time of Hobbes to that of Leibniz, giving in some detail the opinions of Hobbes, Locke, Pierre Bayle, William King, Archbishop of Dublin, and Leibniz and an account of the Scholastic doctrine of liberty of indifference - opinions which either influenced Collins or against which he reacted. The value and originality of Collins' works need assessing. He was also at times liable to misinterpret or misunderstand the authorities he quoted. I have, therefore, subjected the Inquiry to a detailed critique. This also gives cross-references to parallel passages in Collins' works and those of the authors who influenced him, and, by discussing the philosophical and theological questions to which his writings give rise, obviates the need for a good many footnotes in the notes that follow the text.Deism -- Anthony Collins -- Writings -- The Controversy on Freewill -- The Philosophical Inquiry -- Thomas Hobbes -- John Locke -- Pierre Bayle and William King -- Liberty of Indifference -- De Origine Mali -- Bayle and King -- Leibniz -- The Inquiry -- Conclusion -- Text of the Philosophical Inquiry concerning Human Liberty -- Notes to the Text of the Inquiry -- Collation of the Text of the Inquiry.The Philosophical Inquiry concerning Human Liberty of Anthony Collins' was considered by Joseph Priestley and Voltaire to be the best book written on freewill up to their own time. Priestley admitted that it convert­ ed him to determinism and it had a powerful effect on Voltaire in the same direction. It seems important to place in its wider historical context a book which so influenced such men and which greatly impressed the philosophes in general. Therefore - and because such an account has value in itself - the Introduction contains a survey of the freewill controversy from the time of Hobbes to that of Leibniz, giving in some detail the opinions of Hobbes, Locke, Pierre Bayle, William King, Archbishop of Dublin, and Leibniz and an account of the Scholastic doctrine of liberty of indifference - opinions which either influenced Collins or against which he reacted. The value and originality of Collins' works need assessing. He was also at times liable to misinterpret or misunderstand the authorities he quoted. I have, therefore, subjected the Inquiry to a detailed critique. This also gives cross-references to parallel passages in Collins' works and those of the authors who influenced him, and, by discussing the philosophical and theological questions to which his writings give rise, obviates the need for a good many footnotes in the notes that follow the text.Philosophy.Ethics.Philosophy of mind.Philosophy and science.Philosophy.Ethics.Philosophy of Mind.Philosophy of Science.Springer eBookshttp://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-94-010-1368-0URN:ISBN:9789401013680
institution COLPOS
collection Koha
country México
countrycode MX
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
En linea
databasecode cat-colpos
tag biblioteca
region America del Norte
libraryname Departamento de documentación y biblioteca de COLPOS
language eng
topic Philosophy.
Ethics.
Philosophy of mind.
Philosophy and science.
Philosophy.
Ethics.
Philosophy of Mind.
Philosophy of Science.
Philosophy.
Ethics.
Philosophy of mind.
Philosophy and science.
Philosophy.
Ethics.
Philosophy of Mind.
Philosophy of Science.
spellingShingle Philosophy.
Ethics.
Philosophy of mind.
Philosophy and science.
Philosophy.
Ethics.
Philosophy of Mind.
Philosophy of Science.
Philosophy.
Ethics.
Philosophy of mind.
Philosophy and science.
Philosophy.
Ethics.
Philosophy of Mind.
Philosophy of Science.
O’higgins, J. editor.
SpringerLink (Online service)
Determinism and Freewill [electronic resource] : Anthony Collins’ A Philosophical Inquiry Concerning Human Liberty /
description The Philosophical Inquiry concerning Human Liberty of Anthony Collins' was considered by Joseph Priestley and Voltaire to be the best book written on freewill up to their own time. Priestley admitted that it convert­ ed him to determinism and it had a powerful effect on Voltaire in the same direction. It seems important to place in its wider historical context a book which so influenced such men and which greatly impressed the philosophes in general. Therefore - and because such an account has value in itself - the Introduction contains a survey of the freewill controversy from the time of Hobbes to that of Leibniz, giving in some detail the opinions of Hobbes, Locke, Pierre Bayle, William King, Archbishop of Dublin, and Leibniz and an account of the Scholastic doctrine of liberty of indifference - opinions which either influenced Collins or against which he reacted. The value and originality of Collins' works need assessing. He was also at times liable to misinterpret or misunderstand the authorities he quoted. I have, therefore, subjected the Inquiry to a detailed critique. This also gives cross-references to parallel passages in Collins' works and those of the authors who influenced him, and, by discussing the philosophical and theological questions to which his writings give rise, obviates the need for a good many footnotes in the notes that follow the text.
format Texto
topic_facet Philosophy.
Ethics.
Philosophy of mind.
Philosophy and science.
Philosophy.
Ethics.
Philosophy of Mind.
Philosophy of Science.
author O’higgins, J. editor.
SpringerLink (Online service)
author_facet O’higgins, J. editor.
SpringerLink (Online service)
author_sort O’higgins, J. editor.
title Determinism and Freewill [electronic resource] : Anthony Collins’ A Philosophical Inquiry Concerning Human Liberty /
title_short Determinism and Freewill [electronic resource] : Anthony Collins’ A Philosophical Inquiry Concerning Human Liberty /
title_full Determinism and Freewill [electronic resource] : Anthony Collins’ A Philosophical Inquiry Concerning Human Liberty /
title_fullStr Determinism and Freewill [electronic resource] : Anthony Collins’ A Philosophical Inquiry Concerning Human Liberty /
title_full_unstemmed Determinism and Freewill [electronic resource] : Anthony Collins’ A Philosophical Inquiry Concerning Human Liberty /
title_sort determinism and freewill [electronic resource] : anthony collins’ a philosophical inquiry concerning human liberty /
publisher Dordrecht : Springer Netherlands,
publishDate 1976
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-94-010-1368-0
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