6Section I: China
113Section Three Third Period: The Neo-Platonists
7Section II: India
114A. Philo
8Section II. (Continued). India – Buddhism
115B. Cabala and Gnosticism
9Section III: Persia
1161. Cabalistic Philosophy
10Chapter I. The Zend People
1172. The Gnostics
11Chapter II. The Assyrians, Babylonians, Medes, and Persians
118C. Alexandrian Philosophy
12Chapter III. The Persian Empire and its Constituent Parts
1191. Ammonius Saccas
13Part II: The Greek World
1202. Plotinus
14Section I: The Elements of the Greek Spirit
1213. Porphyry and Iamblichus.
15Section II: Phases of Individuality Æsthetically Conditioned
1224. Proclus
16Chapter I. The Subjective Work of Art
1235. The Successors of Proclus
17Chapter II. The Objective Work of Art
124PART TWO PHILOSOPHY OF THE MIDDLE AGES: Introduction
18Chapter III. The Political Work of Art
125Section One Arabian Philosophy
19Section III: The Fall of the Greek Spirit
126A. Philosophy of the Medabberim
20Part III: The Roman World
127B. Commentators of Aristotle
21Section I: Rome to the Time of the Second Punic War
128C. Jewish Philosophers
22Chapter I. The Elements of the Roman Spirit
129Section Two The Scholastic Philosophy
23Chapter II. The History of Rome to the Second Punic War
130A. Relationship of the Scholastic Philosophy to Christianity
24Section II: Rome from the Second Punic War to the Emperors
131B. General Historical Points of View
25Section III:
1321. The Building Up of Dogmas on Metaphysical Grounds
26Chapter I. Rome Under the Emperors
1332. Methodical Representation of the Doctrinal System of the Church
27Chapter II. Christianity
1343. Acquaintanceship with Aristotelian Writings
28Chapter III. The Byzantine Empire
1354. Opposition Between Realism and Nominalism
29Part IV: The German World
1365. Formal Dialectic
30Section I: The Elements of the Christian German World
1376. Mystics
31Chapter I. The Barbarian Migrations
138C. General Standpoint of the Scholastics
32Chapter II. Mohametanism
139Section Three Revival of the Sciences
33Chapter III. The Empire of Charlemagne
140A. Study of the Ancients
34Section II: The Middle Ages
1411. Pomponatius
35Chapter I. The Feudality and the Hierarchy
1422. Bessarion, Ficinus, Picus
36Chapter II. The Crusades
1433. Gassendi, Lipsius, Reuchlin, Helmont
37Chapter III. The Transition from Feudalism to Monarchy
1444. Ciceronian Popular Philosophy
38Section III: The Modern Time
145B. Certain Attempts in Philosophy
39Chapter I. The Reformation
1461. Cardanus
40Chapter II. Influence of the Reformation on Political Development
1472. Campanella
41Chapter III. The Éclaircissement and Revolution
1483. Bruno
42Inaugural Address
1494. Vanini
43Prefatory Note
1505. Petrus Ramus
44Introduction
151C. The Reformation
45A. The Notion of the History of Philosophy
152PART THREE MODERN PHILOSOPHY: Introduction
461. Common Ideas regarding the History of Philosophy
153Section One Modern Philosophy in its First Statement
472. Explanatory Remarks upon the Definition of the History of Philosophy
154A. Bacon
483. Results obtained with respect to the Notion of the History of Philosophy
155B. Jacob Boehme
49B. The Relation of Philosophy to other Departments of Knowledge
156Section Two Period of the Thinking Understanding
501. The Historical side of this Connection
157Chapter I The Metaphysics of the Understanding
512. Separation of Philosophy from other allied departments of Knowledge
158A. First Division
523. Commencement of Philosophy and of its History
1591. Descartes
53C. Division, Sources, and Method adopted in treating of the History of Philosophy
1602. Spinoza
541. Division of the History of Philosophy
1613. Malebranche
552. Sources of the History of Philosophy
162B. Second Division
563. Method of Treatment adopted in this History of Philosophy
1631. Locke
57Oriental Philosophy
1642. Hugo Grotius
58A. Chinese Philosophy
1653. Thomas Hobbes
59B. Indian Philosophy
1664. Cudworth, Clarke, Wollaston
60PART ONE GREEK PHILOSOPHY: Introduction
1675. Puffendorf
61Section One First Period, from Thales to Aristotle
1686. Newton
62Chapter I Period I.—Division I.—Thales to Anaxagoras
169C. Third Section
63A. The Ionic Philosophy
1701. Leibnitz
641. Thales.
1712. Wolff
652. Anaximander.
1723. The Popular Philosophy of Germany
663. Anaximenes.
173Chapter II Transition Period
67B. Pythagoras and the Pythagoreans
174A. Idealism and Scepticism
68C. The Eleatic School
1751. Berkeley
691. Xenophanes.
1762. Hume
702. Parminides.
177B. Scottish Philosophy
713. Melissus.
1781. Thomas Reid
724. Zeno.
1792. James Beattie
73D. Heraclitus
1803. James Oswald
74E. Empedocles, Leucippus and Democritus
1814. Dugald Stewart
751. Leucippus and Democritus.
182C. French Philosophy
762. Empedocles.
1831. The Negative Aspect
77F. Anaxagoras
1842. The Positive Aspect
78Chapter II First Period, Second Division: From the Sophists to the Socratics
1853. Idea of a Concrete Universal Unity
79A. The Sophists
186D. The German Illumination
801. Protagoras.
187Section Three Recent German Philosophy
812. Gorgias.
188A. Jacobi
82B. Socrates
189B. Kant
83C. The Socratics
190C. Fichte
841. The Megarics.
1911. The First Principles of Fichte’s Philosophy
852. The Cyrenaic School.
1922. Fichte’s System in a Re-constituted Form
863. The Cynic School.
1933. The more Important of the Followers of Fichte
87Chapter III First Period, Third Division: Plato and Aristotle
194D. Schelling
88A. Plato
195E. Final Result
891. Dialectic
196First Lecture
902. Philosophy of Nature
197Second Lecture
913. Philosophy of Mind
198Third Lecture
92B. Aristotle
199Fourth Lecture
931. The Metaphysics
200Fifth Lecture
942. Philosophy of Nature
201Sixth Lecture
953. The Philosophy of Mind
202Seventh Lecture
964. The Logic
203Eighth Lecture
97Section Two Second Period: Dogmatism and Scepticism
204Ninth Lecture
98A. The Philosophy of the Stoics
205Tenth Lecture
991. Physics
206Eleventh Lecture
1002. Logic
207Twelfth Lecture
1013. Ethics
208Thirteenth Lecture
102B. Epicurus
209Fourteenth Lecture
1031. Canonical Philosophy
210Fifteenth Lecture
1042. Metaphysics
211Sixteenth Lecture
1053. Physics
212Amplification of the Teleological Proof in the Lectures on the Philosophy of Religion Delivered in the Summer of 1831
1064. Ethics
213Amplification of the Teleological and Ontological Proofs Given in the Lectures on the Philosophy of Religion for the Year 1827
107C. The New Academy
214Amplification of the Ontological Proof in the Lectures on the Philosophy of Religion for the Year 1831