
Megjegyzés:
ELSŐ FEJEZET. A filozófia jelentősége és állása. - 1. §. A filozófia fogalma és feladata.
MÁSODIK FEJEZET. A propædeutikus (előkészítő) diszciplinák. - 8. §. A pszichológia tárgya és feladata.
HARMADIK FEJEZET. Ismeretkritika és ismeretelmélet. - 16. §. Dogmatizmus, szkepticizmus, kriticizmus.
NEGYEDIK FEJEZET. Metafizika vagy ontológia. - 27. §. Az ontológiai probléma.
ÖTÖDIK FEJEZET. Az esztétika útjai és céljai. - 34. §. Az esztétika fogalma és feladata.
HATODIK FEJEZET. Etika és szociológia. - 37. §. Az etika tárgya és feladata.
ÖSSZEFOGLALÁS.
NÉVMUTATÓ.
TARTALOM.
At its core, this work treats philosophy as the disciplined effort to weave everyday experience together with the findings of modern science into a coherent worldview. The author explains that the aim of every philosophical system is to produce a harmonious, closed perspective that satisfies both reason and the deeper longings of the mind. By showing how philosophy must stay in dialogue with the latest scientific discoveries, the book positions the discipline as a living bridge rather than an isolated tradition.
The text traces the psychological roots of philosophy to the innate sense of wonder that first appears in the child who asks simple questions and later evolves into the theoretical curiosity of scholars. It argues that this wonder, initially tied to survival, matures into a lasting drive to reconcile the familiar with the unfamiliar, prompting us to re‑examine even long‑held beliefs under fresh light. Readers are invited to follow this progression and see how the desire for unity shapes our attempts to understand the world and our place within it.
Language
hu
Duration
~6 hours (366K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Albert László from page images generously made available by the Library of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences
Release date
2021-09-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Subjects

1854–1923
Austrian philosopher, educator, and early interpreter of pragmatism, he wrote about psychology, language, and education in ways that linked abstract ideas to everyday life. His work helped introduce English-language philosophy, especially William James, to readers in the German-speaking world.
View all books
by Order of the Eastern Star. General Grand Chapter

by Henry Adams

by John Henry Newman

by Stendhal

by Stephen Charnock

by Brillat-Savarin

by Honoré de Balzac

by A. T. (Andrew Taylor) Still