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  1. Eighteenth-Century Philosophy. (Readings in the History of Philosophy). The Free Press. 1966. [1] Jing-Xing Huang and C S Huang. Philosophy, Philology, and Politics in Eighteenth-Century China. Cambridge University Press. 1995. First paperback edition. 2002. Google Books.

  2. Thomas Hobbes ( / hɒbz / HOBZ; 5 April 1588 – 4 December 1679) was an English philosopher. Hobbes is best known for his 1651 book Leviathan, in which he expounds an influential formulation of social contract theory. [4] He is considered to be one of the founders of modern political philosophy. [5] [6]

  3. Abstract. My aim in this chapter is to read again the metaphysicians of the classical period (I have selected Descartes, Hobbes, Spinoza, Leibniz, and Lock

  4. Daniel Garber, Michael Ayers. Cambridge University Press, 1998 - Philosophy - 1616 pages. Annotation. The Cambridge History of Seventeenth-Century Philosophy offers a uniquely comprehensive and authoritative overview of early-modern philosophy written by an international team of specialists. As with previous Cambridge Histories of Philosophy ...

  5. Introduction. Accounts of the history of feminist philosophy often treat the claims and arguments of those writing before the eighteenth century as a kind of prehistory to the undeniably important development of a conception of women's rights in the 1790s, and describe those promoting the worth of women as pro-woman writers rather than as feminists (see, for example, King Reference King 1991: ...

  6. The aims of this conclusion are, first, to cast into relief the special status of the problem of consonance in the 17th century, and second, to show how subsequent changes in the status of the problem of consonance have re-contextualized its relevance for us today. The Mudd Manuscript Library retains one bound copy of each dissertation.

  7. 20 de ago. de 2010 · Enlightenment. The heart of the eighteenth century Enlightenment is the loosely organized activity of prominent French thinkers of the mid-decades of the eighteenth century, the so-called “ philosophes ” (e.g., Voltaire, D’Alembert, Diderot, Montesquieu). The philosophes constituted an informal society of men of letters who collaborated ...