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  1. A History of Natural Philosophy Natural philosophy encompassed all natural phenomena of the physical world. It sought to discover the physical causes of all natural effects and was little con-cerned with mathematics. By contrast, the exact mathematical sciences – such as astronomy, optics, and mechanics – were narrowly confined to various ...

  2. This article introduces key elements of Coleridge's philosophy in outline, including his theory of ideas, the polar philosophy, and his dynamic idealism, which sees matter as arising from a clash of opposed forces, themselves derived from more originary powers or ideas. Download Free PDF. View PDF.

  3. Nature must be visible spirit, spirit invisible nature. Here then, in the abso-lute identity of spirit in us and nature outside of us, lies the solution to the problem of how nature beyond the self is possible.11 —Schelling, Ideas toward a Philosophy of Nature (1797) [Die Natur soll der sichtbare Geist, der Geist die unsichtbare Natur seyn.

  4. Abstract: One significant thinker who developed a philosophy of nature that is both realist and inherently pluralistic is the long-neglected 20th century German philosopher Nicolai Hartmann. His nature philosophy is grounded in his critical ontology and theory of the stratified structure of the real world.

  5. It is against this background that we should see the work of the three most important philosophers of our century­ Wittgenstein, Heideger, and Dewey. Each tried, in his early years, to ind a new way of making philosophy "foun­ dational"-a new way of formulating an ultimate context for thought.

  6. 2 de sept. de 2023 · Thomas Hobbes (1588-167 9), the English Philosopher is b est. known for his political thought, and deser vedly so. His vision. of the world is strikingly unique and still releva nt to ...

  7. Organic Physics. The more widely known translation by A V Miller (1970) is a translation of the late versions of Hegel's Encyclopedia with additions by Leopold von Hemming and K L Michelet. See also Hegel and Evolution and From Logic to Nature by Stephen Houlgate.