13.1 German Network, 1835–1900: Neo-Kantians,
13.2 British Philosophers and Mathematicians, 1800–1935:
- Medieval Christendom
- The Organizational Bases of Christian Thought
- The Inner Autonomy of the University
- The Breakup of Theological Philosophy
- Intellectuals as Courtiers: The Humanists
- The Question of Intellectual Stagnation
- Twentieth Century Coda: The Intellectual Demoralization of the Late
- Rapid-Discovery Science 10 Cross-Breeding Networks and
- A Cascade of Creative Circles
- Philosophical Connections of the Scientific Revolution
- Three Revolutions and Their Networks
- The Mathematicians
- The Scientific Revolution
- The Philosophical Revolution: Bacon and Descartes
- Meta-territoriality 11 Secularization and Philosophical
- Secularization of the Intellectual Base
- Geopolitics and Cleavages within Catholicism
- Reemergence of the Metaphysical Field
- Reason Jewish Millennialism and Spinoza’s Religion of
- Leibniz’s Mathematical Metaphysics
- Toleration Rival Philosophies upon the Space of Religious
- Deism and the Independence of Value Theory
- The Reversal of Alliances
- Opposition Anti-modernist Modernism and the Anti-scientific
- The Triumph of Epistemology
- The German University Revolution 12 Intellectuals Take Control of Their Base:
- The German Idealist Movement
- Philosophy Captures the University
- Idealism as Ideology of the University Revolution
- Political Crisis as the Outer Layer of Causality
- The Spread of the University Revolution
- The Clustering of Contemporaneous Creativity
- The Incompleteness of Our Historical Picture
- Keys to Figures
- Notes
- References
- Index of Persons
- Index of Subjects
- Historicists, Positivists, Psychologists
- Trinity-Bloomsbury Circle University Reform, Idealist Movement,
- of 13.3 Realignment of the Networks in the Generation
- 13.4 Neo-Kantians and the Vienna Circle
- 13.5 Physicists’ Methodological Controversies
- 13.6 Network of Mathematical Logic and Foundations
- 13.7 Vienna Circle: Composite Network
- 1865–1965 13.8 Network of Phenomenologists and Existentialists,
- 14.1 Network of French Philosophers, 1765–1935
- 1835–1900: Die Freien and the Nihilists 14.2 Young Hegelians and Religious/Political Radicals,
- E.1 Sung Dynasty Celestial Element Algebra
- Philosophical Schools in the Mediterranean Region MAPS
- Intellectual Centers in the Warring States, 350 b.c.e.
- Han Dynasty, 200 b.c.e.–200 c.e.
- Second Period of Division, 250 c.e.
- Ganges States, 500 b.c.e.
- Height of Maurya Empire, 250 b.c.e.
- Balance of Power, 150 c.e.
- Gupta Empire, 400 c.e.
- Eve of Mogul Invasion,
- Principal Chinese Buddhist Monasteries
- Intellectual and Religious Centers of Japan
- Height of the ‘Abbasid Caliphate, 800 c.e.
- Cathedral Schools of Northern France, 1100 c.e.
- Geopolitical Crisis of the Spanish-Habsburg Empire,
- German Universities, 1348–1900
- 2.1 Distribution of Philosophers for All Networks TABLES
- 9.1 University Foundations and Failures, 1000–1600