The Sociology of Philosophies

(Wang) #1
Pythagoreans, 60, 83, 85, 87, 89, 90, 91,
93, 99–102, 118, 120, 610, 956n17;
number philosophy, 87, 125

Rabbanites, 413, 434–436
Realism, 221, 240–242; 820, 826–830; of
universals, 466, 515; sociological, 858–


  1. See also Abhidharma; Materialism;
    Platonism; Vaisheshika
    Reflexivity, 321, 379, 380–383, 787–791,
    809, 877–881; in higher mathematics,
    848–856
    Reification, 379, 788, 866
    Religion of reason: in Spain, 441–442,
    555; in medieval Christian universities,
    475–476; in European secularization,
    574; Spinoza’s, 589–591; Judaism as,

  2. See also Deism
    Religions. See Buddhism; Christianity; Con-
    fucianism; Gnosticism; Greek religious
    cults; Hinduism; Islam; Jainism; Juda-
    ism; Mysticism; Religion of reason;
    Sabian star worshippers; Secularization;
    Shinto; Taoism; Vedic cults; Zoroastrian-
    ism
    Rhetoric, 102–103, 116–118. See also
    Schools, of rhetoric
    Rinzai Zen, 323, 324, 333–335, 337–341,
    343, 348, 350
    Romantic Circle, 3, 530, 618, 631, 637
    Royal Society, 43, 529
    Russell’s paradox, 703, 712–713, 728, 810
    Russia, 770–772


Sabian star worshippers, 404, 408, 410,
416, 417. See also Babylonian star wor-
shippers
Sadducees, 433
St. Louis Hegelians, 531, 672
Samkhya, 228, 233–238, 241–242, 244,
257, 259, 264, 269–270, 821, 841,
966n39
Sarvastivadins, 215–217, 220, 222, 236,
242, 248, 249, 256, 820
Satkaryavada, 236, 237, 249, 821, 841
Sautrantikas, 217, 220, 222, 238, 283,
448, 820
Scandinavia, 613, 685, 765–768
Scholasticism, textual, 793–796
Schools, 65; in China, 65, 145, 304; in


Greece, 89–97, 95, 103–104, 109–110,
115–118; of rhetoric, 82, 95, 115, 118;
in India, 194–196; Hindu maths, 226,
250, 264, 265, 268–269, 520; in Japan,
337, 339, 343, 348–350, 352–353, 356–
359, 363, 366; Islamic madrasas, 421,
423, 428, 453–454, 460–462, 510–511,
520, 688; Jesuit, 577–578; in Germany,
640–642; in America, 671–672, 683; in
Italy, 683–685; in France, 757–758, 761–


  1. See also Universities
    Science: in China, 305, 319; rapid-discov-
    ery, 382, 532–538, 559–562, 807, 830;
    in medieval Christendom, 488–493;
    revolution in, 523–524, 556; anti-scien-
    tific intellectuals, 609, 611–613; and cos-
    mology, 804; and occultism, 805–807;
    reality of its objects, 870–875
    Science and mathematics networks: in Is-
    lamic world, 396, 404–405, 409, 418,
    424, 431, 438, 440, 546–549, 552; in
    China, 533, 549–551; in Greece, 533–
    534, 543–546, 549, 552 in Europe, 543,
    553–556; in Christendom, 548–549;
    in India, 551; Scotland, 595, 614–617,
    639
    Scotists, 490, 497, 504, 519, 580, 581,
    815,
    Secularization, 263, 524–526; Idealism as
    halfway house to, 316–317, 618, 646,
    650, 663–667, 674, 680–681, 683–686,
    778, 825–826; in Tokugawa Japan, 362,
    369–370, 378; via stalemate, opportun-
    ism and compromise, 369, 573–574,
    584–587, 600–603; exhaustion in relig-
    ious wars, 594–596, 598; of universities,
    618, 640–641, 644–645; Christianity
    abolished in revolutionary France, 661;
    struggle over secular education in Italy,
    France, and Germany, 683–684, 743; cy-
    cles of secularization and religious re-
    vival, 747–748. See also Anti-clerical-
    ism, Deism
    Semiotics, 676–677, 679
    Sense and reference, 47, 703
    “Seven Sages” (Greek), 69, 148
    Seven Sages of the Bamboo Grove, 73,
    165, 168, 171, 174, 206, 296
    Shaivism, 188–189, 191, 241, 250, 257,
    259, 260, 262, 264–265, 269, 969n62


1096 •^ Index of Subjects

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