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The Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy is an online encyclopedia on philosophical topics and philosophers founded by James Fieser in 1995. It uses a traditional, closed procedure for commissioning and refereeing its permanent articles (comparable to that of the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy: see peer review) but sometimes uses material from public domain resources and student papers to create temporary stop-gap articles until permanent articles are completed. While of high quality, the encyclopedia is in general more accessible and introductory than the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.

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The Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy - Free online encyclopedia. Edited by James Fieser, hosted by the University of Tennessee at Martin.

Academy - Description of the philosophical institution founded by Plato, which advocated skepticism in succeeding generations.

Active Powers - The capacities of impulse and desire which lead to or determine human action, as described by 18th and 19th century Scottish common sense philosophy.

Aenesidemus - Biography of the 1st century philosopher who defended the ten tropes of skepticism.

Anaxagoras - Greek philosopher born about 500 BCE, responsible for giving philosophy a home at Athens and the first philosopher to introduce a spiritual principle which gives matter life and form.

Anaxarchus - 4th century BCE philosopher of Abdera, from the school of Democritus.

Anaximander - Greek philosopher of Miletus, born 611 BCE who thought it unnecessary to fix upon air, water, or fire as the original and primary form of body.

Anaximenes - 5th century BCE Greek philosopher of Miletus who regarded 'air' as the primary form of body.

Animals and Ethics - Consideration of moral status of non-human animals.

Anselm - 11th century English prelate who developed views of atonement and satisfaction which are still held by orthodox theologians.

Antisthenes - Athenian philosopher and founder of the Cynic sect who was born around 440 BCE.

Aquinas, Thomas - The life and work of the major figure in scholastic philosophy.

Aristippus - Description of the life and teachings of the philosopher Aristippus, founder of the Cyrenaic school of philosophy.

Aristotle - The life and work of the 4th century BCE Greek philosopher.

Augustine - Extensive article on the life and work of the 4th century ecclesiastical author.

Bacon, Francis - 16th century philosopher and politician.

Bakhtin Circle - School of Russian thought centered on the work of Bakhtin which focused on questions of signification in artistic creation.

Beccaria, Cesare - 18th century aristocrat whose work 'On Crimes and Punishments (1764)' inspired reform in the Italian criminal justice system.

Behaviorism - Theory in philosophy of mind which maintains that talk of mental events should be translated into talk about observable behavior.

Bentham, Jeremy - Extensive article on the 18th century 'founder' of utilitarianism.

Berkeley, George - Influential 18th century Irish philosopher.

Berlin Circle - Group of academics who gathered round Hans Reichenbach in late 1920s and later joined up with the Vienna Circle.

Bolingbroke, Henry St. John - 18th century Tory disciple of Locke.

Butler, Joseph - 18th century icon of a highly intellectualized theology.

Caird, Edward - Nineteenth century Scottish philosopher who was one of the key figures of the idealist movement that dominated British philosophy from 1870 until the mid 1920s.

Capital Punishment - The issue of capital punishment involves determining whether the execution of criminals is ever justified.

Carnap, Rudolf - Extensive article about his life and work, by Mauro Murzi.

Chinese Room Argument - John Searle's thought experiment is one of the best known counters to claims of artificial intelligence.

Chrysippus - Prolific stoic of Soli, and disciple of Cleanthes.

Cicero, Marcus Tullius - 1st century BCE Roman orator and philosopher of the New Academy.

Cleanthes - Stoic philosopher of Assus in Lydia, disciple of Zeno of Citium.

Cudworth, Ralph - 17th century 'Cambridge Platonist' who fought for preservation of religious ideals, including divine illumination.

Cumberland, Richard - 17th century critic of Hobbes and the neo-Platonists.

Cyrenaics - Description of the Cyrenaic school of philosophy, which flourished from the 5th-3rd centuries BCE. The Cyrenaics were skeptics and hedonists.

Damon - 5th century BCE Pythagorean philosopher of Syracuse.

Davidson, Donald - Introduction to one of the most significant philosophers concerned with philosophy of mind and action of the 20th/21st century.

Deism, English - Explores the deism of Hobbes, Locke, Tindal, and the influence of Hume.

Deism, French - The deism of Voltaire and Rousseau.

Democritus - 4th century BCE philosopher of Abdera who expanded the atomic theory of Leucippus.

Demonax - Philosopher of the second century CE. who tried to revive the philosophy of the Cynic School.

Descartes, René - Early modern philosopher who rejected religious authority in the quest for scientific and philosophical knowledge.

Dewey, John - Leading light of the 20th century American school of thought known as pragmatism.

Diderot, Denis - The most prominent of the French Encyclopedists and one of the leaders of the Enlightenment.

Diogenes Laertius - 3rd century biographer of ancient Greek philosophers.

Diogenes of Apollonia - Pupil of Anaximenes and contemporary of Anaxagoras in the 6th cn. BCE.

Diogenes of Sinope - 4th cn. BCE cynic philosopher of Sinope.

Eckhart, Meister - 13th century Dominican mystic who was almost forgotten until Franz von Baader revived his memory in the nineteenth century.

Eclecticism - Group of ancient philosophers who sought to reach by selection the highest degree of probability in the search for truth.

Egoism, Psychological and Ethical - Maintains that the individual self is the motivating moral force and the end of moral action.

Emanation - The theory that all derived or secondary things flow from the primary.

Empedocles - 5th century BCE philosopher who combined medical study with Orphic mysticism.

Encyclopedists - Group of French philosophers and men of letters who collaborated in the production of the famous Encyclopedie.

Epictetus - Eminent Stoic philosopher, born as a slave at Hieropolis in Phyrgia in 55 CE.

Epicurus - 4th century BCE materialist, empiricist, and hedonist. One of the major philosophers of the Hellenistic period.

Euclides - 4th century BCE native of Megara, and founder of the Megarian or Eristic sect.

Evolution - Introduces evolution through the ages, from the ancient Greeks, through Leibniz and Descartes to Darwin and Spencer.

Ferrier, James Frederick - The earliest absolute idealist in English philosophy.

Fichte, Immanuel Hermann - Aimed to secure a philosophical basis for the personality of God.

Fichte, Johann Gottlieb - One of the major figures in German philosophy in the period between Kant and Hegel.

Freud, Sigmund - Lenghty article on the father of psychoanalysis who is generally recognised as one of the most influential and authoritative thinkers of the twentieth century.

German Idealism - The German reaction to empiricism, including related theories of Kant, Fichte, Hegel and others.

God, Western Concepts of - Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy article on God from Socrates to Nietzsche.

Gorgias - Greek sophist and rhetorician, known as the Nihilist, born in 483 BCE.

Greek Philosophy - The philosophical currents of Ancient Greek philosophy are introduced, from the Presocratic philosophers through to Proclus.

Hamilton, William - 19th century exponent of the Scottish common-sense philosophy.

Hartmann, Karl Robert Eduard Von - 19th century German philosopher who attempted to combine the idea of Hegel with the will of Schopenhauer in 'spiritual monism.'

Hölderlin, Johann Christian Friedrich - Examines the poet's role in the development of German Idealism.

Hegelians, St. Louis - 19th century group of amateur American philosophers founded and led by William Torrey Harris.

Helvetius, Claude Adrien - One of the 18th century Encyclopedists who held the skeptical and materialistic views common to that school of philosophy.

Hempel, Carl Gustav - A leading member of logical positivism, the German philosopher died in 1997.

Heraclitus - 5th century BCE. Presocratic Greek philosopher.

Herbert of Cherbury, Edward - 17th century historian, poet (brother of George), and philosopher. Sought to determine the nature and standard of truth, and conditions of knowledge. Precursor of the philosophy of Common Sense.

Hippias - Hippias was a sophist, a contemporary of Socrates, and an enthusiast for universality.

Hobbes, Thomas - 17th century British philosopher. Author of Leviathan (1651).

Hodgson, Shadworth - Follower of Kant, founder of the Aristotelian Society.

Humanism - Brief article on Erasmus and the Italian humanist movement.

Hume, David - Enormously influential 18th century Scottish philosopher. Author of Treatise of Human Nature (1739-1740).

Husserl, Edmund - Leader of the German phenomenological movement.

Huxley, Thomas Henry - 19th century zoologist and advocate of Darwinism.

Identity Theory - Form of monistic materialism which maintains that mental states and brain activities are identical.

Interventionism - Examines the nature and justifications of interfering with another polity or choices made by individuals.

Jacobi, Friedrich Heinrich - 18th century German philosopher, famous for effective criticism of Kant.

Just War Theory - Some of those who have attempted to justify war include Aquinas, Grotius, and Pufendorf.

Leucippus - 5th century BCE founder of atomism.

Locke, John - Article on the life and work of the influential philosopher.

Lombard, Peter - French scholastic theologian of the 12th century, influenced by Abelard.

Lotze, Rudolf Hermann - 19th century German philosopher who criticised the pantheism of Hegel.

Lucretius - Roman poet and advocate of Epicurean philosophy.

Menippus - Third century BCE Greek philosopher and satirist.

Mill, John Stuart - 19th leader and prophet of utilitarianism, heir to the Hume-Bentham line, and influential force in modern political theory. Author of On Liberty (1859), and Utilitarianism (1863).

Moral Luck - Andrew Latus, St. Francis Xavier University, summarizes the discussion between Thomas Nagel and Bernard Williams on the question: Can luck ever make a moral difference?

Moral Philosophy - Introduction to ethics, with links to other articles at the IEP.

Natural Law - Standards that govern human behavior objectively derived from the nature of human beings.

Natural Theology - Used in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries to describe knowledge of God drawn from nature.

Neoplatonism - The revival of Greek philosophy in 3rd century BCE, led by Plotinus and his disciple, Porphyry. Influenced by both Pythagoras and Plato.

Ockham, William of - Detailed biography of the 14th century Franciscan.

Origen - Father of the early Church, born around 182.

Paley, William - 18th century British theologian.

Parmenides - Greek philosopher and poet.

Peripatetics - Brief history of the Peripatetic doctrines.

Plato - Biography and description of the philosophy of Plato.

Plotinus - 3rd century CE founder of Neo-Platonism.

Poincaré, Jules Henri - 19th century French philosopher of science.

Positivism, Legal - Theory that law is manufactured according to certain social conventions.

Prodicus - 5th century BCE sophist, possibly a mentor of Socrates

Protagoras - Early Greek sophist.

Pyrrho - 4th century BCE founder of the Greek school of skepticism.

Pythagoras - The 6th century BCE philosopher.

Reichenbach, Hans - Leading German philosopher of science, and logical positivist.

Renaissance - Brief article on the transition between middle ages and modernity.

Rights, Human - A treatment of the origins and development of the theory of human rights, with philosophical analysis, justifications, and criticisms.

Roman Philosophy - Short introduction to Roman philosophy from the Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy.

Rousseau, Jean Jacques - 18th century French author of the Social Contract, influential during the French Revolution.

Russell's Paradox - Examines self-referential linguistics used to describe properties and sets.

Shaftesbury, Earl of - Patron of John Locke

Shpet, Gustav - Leading proponent of Russian transcendental phenomenology.

Skepticism, Ancient Greek - A description of skepticism in Ancient Greece, led by Pyrrho.

Skepticism, Contemporary - Introduction to the current discussion of skepticism.

Social Contract Theory - View that morality is based on social agreements that serve the interests of those who make the agreement.

Solipsism - The doctrine of the solipsist is that existence means my existence and that of my mental states.

Solovyov, Vladimir - 19th century Russian philosopher.

Sophists - Teachers of philosophy in Ancient Greece, including Protagoras, Gorgias, Prodicus and Hippias.

Spinoza, Benedict - 17th century pantheist, critic of Descartes.

Stephen, Leslie - 19th century British academic.

Stilpo - 4th century BCE member of the Megarean school.

Stirling, James Hutchison - 19th century British Idealist, Hegelian academic.

Stoic Philosophy of Mind - Description of the philosophy of Mind of the Stoics, including the relationship between mind and body, perception, action-theory, and emotion.

Stoicism - Description of the system of ethics, popular in Ancient Greece, which has physics as its foundation.

Symposium - Drinking-parties in Ancient Greece where the guests reclined on couches, and were crowned with garlands of flowers.

Synderesis - Scholastic philosophy describes this as the principle in moral consciousness which directs an agent to good.

Thales - Detailed biographical essay on the Ancient Greek philosopher.

Theophrastus - Philosopher of the Peripatetic school, successor to Aristotle at the Lyceum.

Time - Long article about questions of time discussed throughout the history of philosophy.

Timon - 3rd century BCE disciple of Pyrrho.

Truth - Philosophical theories on the nature of truth, by Bradley Dowden and Norman Swartz.

Vienna Circle - Organised the development of logical postivism in the 1920s. Included Carnap, Feigl, Frank, Gödel, Hahn, Kraft, Neurath, Waismann. Popper and Wittgenstein also had association with the Vienna Circle.

Virtue Theory - View that morality is the development of or virtues.

Voluntarism - Theory that God or the ultimate nature of reality is conceived as some form of will.

Warburton, William - 18th century Church of England bishop, and critic of the Deists.

Wittgenstein, Ludwig - Detailed essay on the life and work of the 20th century philosopher.

Xenophanes - Eleatic school, powerful 6th century BCE critic of polytheism.

Xenophon - Pupil of Socrates, who contributed to the record of his life.

Zeno of Elea - 5th century BCE Eleatic philosopher.

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