Translated from German by Elizabeth S. Haldane. — London: Kegan Paul, Trench, Trübner & Co., 1896. — 571 p.
Philosophy of the Middle Ages.The Idea of Christianity.
The Fathers and Heterodoxies.
Church and State.
Arabian philosophy.The philosophy of the Medabberim.
Commentators of Aristotele.
Jewish Philosophers: Moses Maimonides.
The Scholastic Philosophy.Relationship of the Scholastic Philosophy to Christianity.General Historical Points of View.The Building up of Dogmas on Metaphisycal Grounds.
Anselm.Abelard.Methodical Representation of the Doctrinal System of the Church.
Peter Lombard.Thomas Aquinas.John Duns Scotus.Acquaintanceship with Aristotelian Writings.
Alexander of Hales.Albertus Magnus.Opposition between Realism and Nominalism.
Roscelinus.Walter of Mortagne.William Occam.Buridan.Formal Dialectic.
Mystics.
General Standpoint of the Scholastics.
Revival of the Sciences.Study of the Ancients.
Certain Attempts in Philosophy.
The Reformation.
Modern Philosophy.Modern Philosophy in its First Statement.
Bacon.
Jacob Boeme.
Period of the Thinking Understanding.The Metaphysics of the Understanding.First Division.
Descartes.Spinoza.Malebranche.Second Division.
Locke.Hugo Grotius.Thomas Hobbes.Cudworth, Clarke, Wollaston.Puffendorf.Newton.Third Division.
Leibnitz.Wolff.German Popular Philosophy.Transition Period.Idealism and Scepticism.Berkeley.
Hume.
Scottish Philosophy.Thomas Reid.
James Beattie.
James Oswald.
Dugald Stewart.
French Philosophy.The Negative Aspect.
The Positive Aspect.
Materialism.Robinet.