Description
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- Cover
- Title page
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction: Show Me the Arguments
- Philosophy of Religion
- Metaphysics
- Epistemology
- Ethics
- Philosophy of Mind
- Science and Language
- How to Use This Book
- Part I: Philosophy of Religion
- 1 Aquinas’ Five Ways
- The First Way – The Argument from Motion
- The Second Way – The Argument from Causation
- The Third Way – The Argument from Possibility and Necessity
- The Fourth Way – The Argument from Gradation
- The Fifth Way – The Argument from the Governance
- 2 The Contingency Cosmological Argument
- 3 The Kalam Argument for the Existence of God
- 4 The Ontological Argument
- 5 Pascal’s Wager
- 6 James’ Will to Believe Argument
- 7 The Problem of Evil
- 8 The Free Will Defense to the Problem of Evil
- 9 St. Anselm on Free Choice and the Power to Sin
- 10 Hume’s Argument against Miracles
- 11 The Euthyphro Dilemma
- 12 Nietzsche’s Death of God
- 13 Ockham’s Razor
- Part II: Metaphysics
- 14 Parmenides’ Refutation of Change
- 15 McTaggart’s Argument against the Reality of Time
- 16 Berkeley’s Master Argument for Idealism
- 17 Kant’s Refutation of Idealism
- 18 The Master Argument of Diodorus Cronus
- 19 Lewis’ Argument for Possible Worlds
- 20 A Reductionist Account of Personal Identity
- Defining Premises
- Arguments in Defense of the Reductionist View
- 21 Split-Case Arguments about Personal Identity
- 22 The Ship of Theseus
- 23 The Problem of Temporary Intrinsics
- 24 A Modern Modal Argument for the Soul
- 25 Two Arguments for the Harmlessness of Death
- Epicurus’ Death is Nothing to Us Argument
- Lucretius’ Symmetry Argument
- 26 The Existence of Forms: Plato’s Argument from the Possibility of Knowledge
- 27 Plato, Aristotle, and the Third Man Argument
- 28 Logical Monism
- 29 The Maximality Paradox
- 30 An Argument for Free Will
- 31 Frankfurt’s Refutation of the Principle of Alternative Possibilities
- 32 Van Inwagen’s Consequence Argument against Compatibilism
- Van Inwagen’s First Formalization
- 33 Fatalism
- 34 Sartre’s Argument for Freedom
- Part III: Epistemology
- 35 The Cogito Arguments of Descartes and Augustine
- Descartes’ Cogito
- Augustine’s “Si fallor, sum” Argument (If I Am Mistaken, I Exist)
- 36 The Cartesian Dreaming Argument for External-World Skepticism
- 37 The Transparency of Experience Argument
- 38 The Regress Argument for Skepticism
- 39 Moore’s Anti-Skeptical Arguments
- 40 The Bias Paradox
- 41 Gettier’s Argument against the Traditional Account of Knowledge
- 42 Putnam’s Argument against Cultural Imperialism
- Extension of Putnam’s Argument
- 43 Davidson on the Very Idea of a Conceptual Scheme
- Part I: Shorter Version (Leaves Key Premises Unsupported)
- Part II: Detailed Version
- Complete Failure of Translation
- Partial Failure of Translation
- The Unintelligibility of the Very Idea of a Conceptual Scheme
- 44 Quine’s Two Dogmas of Empiricism
- 45 Hume and the Problem of Induction
- Hume’s Problem of Induction
- Hume’s Negative Argument concerning Induction
- 46 Argument by Analogy in Thales and Anaximenes
- 47 Quine’s Epistemology Naturalized
- 48 Sellars and the Myth of the Given
- 49 Sellars’ “Rylean Myth”
- 50 Aristotle and the Argument to End All Arguments
- Part IV: Ethics
- 51 Justice Brings Happiness in Plato’s Republic
- 52 Aristotle’s Function Argument
- 53 Aristotle’s Argument that Goods Are Irreducible
- 54 Aristotle’s Argument for Perfectionism
- 55 Categorical Imperative as the Source for Morality
- 56 Kant on Why Autonomy Deserves Respect
- 57 Mill’s Proof of Utilitarianism
- Generic Argument for Traditional Utilitarianism
- Mill’s Proof of Utilitarianism (Straightforward Interpretation)
- Mill’s Proof of Utilitarianism (One Alternative Interpretation)
- Mill’s Proof of Utilitarianism (Another Alternative Interpretation)
- 58 The Experience Machine Objection to Hedonism
- 59 The Error Theory Argument
- 60 Moore’s Open Question Argument
- 61 Wolff’s Argument for the Rejection of State Authority
- 62 Nozick’s Taxation Is Forced Labor Argument
- 63 Charity is Obligatory
- 64 The Repugnant Conclusion
- 65 Taurek on Numbers Don’t Count
- 66 Parfit’s Leveling Down Argument against Egalitarianism
- 67 Nozick’s Wilt Chamberlain Argument
- 68 Liberal Feminism
- The Nature of Women’s Disadvantage and Oppression
- The Source of Women’s Disadvantage and Oppression
- Achieving Gender Justice
- 69 Moral Status of Animals from Marginal Cases
- 70 The Ethical Vegetarianism Argument
- 71 Thomson and the Famous Violinist
- 72 Marquis and the Immorality of Abortion
- 73 Tooley on Abortion and Infanticide
- 74 Rachels on Euthanasia
- Part V: Philosophy of Mind
- 75 Leibniz’ Argument for Innate Ideas
- Three Arguments
- 76 Descartes’ Arguments for the Mind–Body Distinction
- 77 Princess Elisabeth and the Mind–Body Problem
- 78 Kripke’s Argument for Mind–Body Property Dualism
- 79 The Argument from Mental Causation for Physicalism
- 80 Davidson’s Argument for Anomalous Monism
- 81 Putnam’s Multiple Realization Argument against Type-Physicalism
- 82 The Supervenience Argument against Non-Reductive Physicalism
- 83 Ryle’s Argument against Cartesian Internalism
- 84 Jackson’s Knowledge Argument
- 85 Nagel’s “What Is It Like to Be a Bat” Argument against Physicalism
- 86 Chalmers’ Zombie Argument
- 87 The Argument from Revelation
- 88 Searle and the Chinese Room Argument
- Part VI: Science and Language
- 89 Sir Karl Popper’s Demarcation Argument
- 90 Kuhn’s Incommensurability Arguments
- Rationality and Paradigm Shifts
- Incommensurable Paradigms and Holism
- 91 Putnam’s No Miracles Argument
- 92 Galileo’s Falling Bodies
- 93 Eliminative Materialism
- 94 Wittgenstein’s Private Language Argument
- 95 Fodor’s Argument for Linguistic Nativism
- 96 Fodor and the Impossibility of Learning
- 97 Quine on the Indeterminacy of Translation
- 98 Davidson’s Argument for the Principle of Charity
- 99 Frege’s Argument for Platonism
- 100 Mathematical Platonism
- Appendix A: Learning the Logical Lingo
- Appendix B: Rules of Inference and Replacement
- Notes on Contributors
- Index




