Tabla de Contenidos:
  • Contents
  • General Editors' Preface,
  • Editor's Introduction,
  • PART ONE: LECTURES ON MATHEMATICAL LOGIC
  • 1 The General Character of Mathematical Logic
  • 1 A Descriptive Approach
  • 2 An Analytic Approach
  • 2 The Development and Limits of Mathematical Logic
  • 1 The Pursuit of an Ideal
  • 2 Logical Formalization
  • 3 Principal Lines of Endeavor
  • 4 Godelian Limitations
  • 5 The Transcendence of Godelian Limitations
  • 6 Conclusion
  • 3 The Truth of a Mathematical-logical System
  • 1 The Truth of What?
  • 2 The General Character of Such Truth
  • 3 What Is Meant by Truth'?4 A Mathematical-logical System Is by Postulation a Virtually Unconditioned
  • 5 Various Types of Mathematical-logical Systems Contain Fragments of Factual Truth
  • 4 The Foundations of Logic
  • 1 Traditional Logic
  • 2 The Changed Situation
  • 3 The Question of Foundations
  • 4 Symptoms of the Ambivalence of Technique
  • 5 Samples of Foundations of Logic
  • 5 Mathematical Logic and Scholasticism
  • 1 A New Factor in the Problem of Method
  • 2 Is Scholastic Thought an Axiomatic System?
  • 3 Mathematical Logic and Existence
  • 4 Mathematical Logic and Substance5 Conclusion
  • PART TWO: LONERGAN'S LECTURE OUTLINES
  • 6 The Lecture Notes on Mathematical Logic
  • 1 The General Character of Mathematical Logic
  • 2 The Development of Mathematical Logic
  • 3 The Truth of an ML System
  • 4 The Foundations of Logic
  • 5 Mathematical Logic and Scholasticism
  • 7 The Lecture Notes on Existentialism I: Orientation and Authors
  • 1 General Orientation
  • 2 On Being Oneself
  • 3 On Being Oneself: Philosophic Significance of the Theme
  • 4 Husserl: Later Period
  • 5 Critique of Husserl's Krisis
  • 6 Phenomenology: Nature, Significance, Limitations7 M. Heidegger
  • 8 Single Page on 'Horizon'
  • 8 The Lecture Notes on Existentialism II: Subject and Horizon
  • 1 The Dilemma of the Subject
  • 2 Subject and Horizon
  • 3 Horizon and Dread
  • 4 Horizon and History
  • 5 Horizon as the Problem of Philosophy
  • PART THREE: LECTURES ON EXISTENTIALISM
  • 9 General Orientation
  • 1 The Term 'Existentialism'
  • 2 Bibliography
  • 3 'Being a Man'
  • 4 Relation to Positivism and Idealism
  • 5 Time and History
  • 6 Existentialism and Scholasticism
  • 7 Marcel and Jaspers10 On Being Oneself
  • 1 The Subject
  • 2 Patterns of Consciousness
  • 3 The Intellectual Pattern
  • 4 The Practical Pattern
  • 5 'Oneself'
  • 6 Withdrawal-and-Return
  • 7 Philosophic Significance of the Theme
  • 11 The Later Husserl
  • 1 Husserl's Last Work
  • 2 Is There a Crisis in Science?
  • 3 Fourth-century Athens
  • 4 The Renaissance
  • 5 The Criterion
  • 6 Five Criticisms of Modern Science
  • 7 Diagnosis
  • 8 Remedy
  • 9 Critique of Husserl's Krisis
  • 12 Phenomenology: Nature, Significance, Limitations