Greek Philosophy from Its Origin to Plato On the Origin of Philosophy in Greece The First Philosophizers Nature and Consistency Natural Things The Return to Things The Consistency of Things The Necessity of Platonic Philosophy The Form of Plato’s Philosophy
Historical Knowledge in Herodotus The Purpose of Herodotus The Concept of Importance in History The Material of History The Suppositions of Herodotus Time and History
The Meaning of Aristotelian Philosophy The Hellenic Social Situation in the Fourth Century The Intellectual Tradition of the Politics The Metaphysical Roots of Aristotelian Politics The Program of Aristotle’s Politics The Reality of the Pólis Pólis and politeía Security as a Theme of Politics
Stoic Philosophy The Appearance of Hellenistic Philosophies The Stoic Doctrine What Is Stoic “Philosophy”? Stoicism in the Ancient World
Scholasticism in Its Own World and in Ours Philosophy and Situation The Problem of the Medieval “World” The Classical World The Basic Postulates of “Christian Philosophy” Scholasticism in Its Own Situation Saint Anselm Saint Thomas Aquinas Francisco Suárez The Generations Following Suárez The Nineteenth Century The Present Position Scholasticism in Our Situation The Meaning of “Christian Philosophy”
Suárez in the Perspective of Historical Reason The World of Suárez The Attitude of Suárez Method The Historical Fate of the Philosophy of Suárez
Modern Metaphysics The European Mind in the Seventeenth Century The Genesis of Modern Philosophy The Problems of Rationalistic Metaphysics
Physics and Metaphysics in Newton Natural Philosophy The Inductive Method The Meaning of Modern Physics Physics and Metaphysics
The Two Cartesianisms 1650–1950 Twenty Generations “Functional Cartesianism” Two Cartesianisms The Idea of Substance The Problem of Analogy
The Philosophy of Life The Philosophy of the Nineteenth Century Steps in the Discovery of Life The Idea of Life in Dilthey