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Philosophical Mysteries SUNY Series in Systematic Philosophy
author
:
Ross, Stephen David.
publisher
:
State University of New York Press
isbn10 | asin
:
0873955242
print isbn13
:
9780873955249
ebook isbn13
:
9780585076461
language
:
English
subject
Philosophy, Ontology, Metaphysics.
publication date
:
1981
lcc
:
B53.R685eb
ddc
:
110
subject
:
Philosophy, Ontology, Metaphysics.
Page i
Philosophical Mysteries
Page ii
SUNY Series in Systematic Philosophy Robert C. Neville, Editor
Whether systematic philosophies are intended as true pictures of the world, as hypotheses, as the dialectic of history, or as heuristic devices for relating rationally to a multitude of things, they each constitute articulated ways by which experience can be ordered, and as such they are contributions to culture. One does not have to choose between Plato and Aristotle to appreciate that Western civilization is enriched by the Platonic as well as Aristotelian ways of seeing things.
The term "systematic philosophy" can be applied to any philosophical enterprise that functions with a perspective from which everything can be addressed. Sometimes this takes the form of an attempt to spell out the basic features of things in a system. Other times it means the examination of a limited subject from the many angles of a context formed by a systematic perspective. In either case systematic philosophy takes explicit or implicit responsibility for the assessment of its unifying perspective and for what is seen from it. The styles of philosophy according to which systematic philosophy can be practiced are as diverse as the achievements of the great philosophers in history, and doubtless new styles are needed for our time.
Yet systematic philosophy has not been a popular approach during this century of philosophical professionalism. It is the purpose of this series to stimulate and publish new systematic works employing the techniques and advances in philosophical reflection made during this century. The series is committed to no philosophical school or doctrine, nor to any limited style of systematic thinking. Whether the systematic achievements of previous centuries can be equalled in the 20th depends on the emergence of forms of systematic philosophy appropriate to our times. The current resurgence of interest in the project deserves the cultivation it may receive from the SUNY Series in Systematic Philosophy.
Page iii
Philosophical Mysteries
Stephen David Ross
State University of New York Press Albany
Page iv
Published by State University of New York Press, Albany
1981 State University of New York
All rights reserved
Printed in the United States of America
No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever without written permission except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles and reviews.
For information, address State University of New York Press, State University Plaza, Albany, N.Y,, 12246
Library of Congress Cataloging in Publication Data
Ross, Stephen David. Philosophical mysteries. Bibliography: p. Includes index. 1. Philosophy. 2. Ontology. 3. Metaphysics. I. Title. B53.R685 110 80-26837 ISBN 0-87395-524-2 ISBN 0-87395-525-0 (pbk.)
Page v
Contents
Acknowledgment
vii
Preface
1
Introduction
4
General Remarks
Philosophical Argument
Philosophy as Art
I. Being
15
The mystery of Being is the mystery of Non-being
The mystery of Being is the mystery of the totality of things
The mystery of Being is that there is anything at all
The mystery of Being is that there is no reason for the existence of the world
The mystery of Being is the mystery of what the world is
The mystery of Being is that Being is inexhaustible
The mystery of Being is the nature of the universe
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