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Naturalism and Agnosticism

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Naturalism and Agnosticism Synopsis

James Ward (1843–1925) was Professor of Mental Philosophy and Logic at the University of Cambridge. First published in 1899, this two-volume work consists of his Gifford Lectures, delivered between 1896 and 1898, in which he criticises Naturalism (the belief that all phenomena are governed by the laws of science, and that the supernatural cannot exist), and Agnosticism (the belief that the existence of spiritual phenomena cannot be proved or disproved), in favour of Idealism, in which spiritual and non-material phenomena are central to human experience. The lectures in Volume 2 oppose dualist defences of the Mechanical Theory, which claim that the mind is distinct from physical objects. Ward ultimately argues for a monistic Idealist view, in which consciousness and the physical world are inseparable. He also claims that because Naturalism is so easily refuted, it actually promotes Idealism, in an argument that continues to evoke philosophical debate.

About This Edition

ISBN: 9781108040983
Publication date: 8th December 2011
Author: James Ward
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Format: Paperback
Pagination: 310 pages
Series: Cambridge Library Collection - Philosophy
Genres: Philosophy of religion
Agnosticism and atheism
Philosophy of science