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Contents for Volume XXIX (1991) ARTICLES The Intelligible World-Animal in Plato's Timaeus, RICHARD D. eARRV . . 13 Spontaneity and the Generation of Rational Beings in Leibniz's Theory of Biological Reproduction, DANIEL C, FOUKE ...................... 33 Corpuscles, Mechanism, and Essentialism in Berkeley and Locke, MARGA RET ATHERTON ..................................................... 47 John Stuart Mill on Induction and Hypothesis, STRVAN JACOBS ........ 69 Hume's "Of Miracles," Peirce, and the Balancing of Likelihoods, ~ENNETH R. MERRILL .................................................... 85 Plato and the Senses of Words, THOMAS A. BLACKSON ................ 169 Malebranche versus Arnauld, MONTE COOK .......................... 183 Locke on Personal Identity, RENNETH P. WINKLER ................... 20~ Kant, Mendelssohn, Lambert, and the Subjectivity of Time, LORNE VALKENSTEIN .................................................. 227 Hegel, Marx, and the Concept of Immanent Critique, ANDREW BUCHWALTER .................................................. 253 Socratic Reason and Socratic Revelation, MARK L. MCeHERRAN ........ 345 The Dating of Rule IV-B in Descartes's Regulae ad directionem ingenii, fREDERICK 1". VAN DE I'IWTE .................................. 375 The Role of Perceptual Relativity in Berkeley's Philosophy, ROBER'r MUEHLMANN ................................................... 397 Fichte on Skepticism, DANIEL BREaZEALE ............................ 427 A Unique Way of Existing: Merleau-Ponty and the Subject, JERROLD SIEGEL ......................................................... 455 Skeptic Purgatives: Therapeutic Arguments in Ancient Skepticism, MARTHA NUSSBAUM ..................................................... 521 Thomas Aquinas on Will as Rational Appetite, DAVID GALLAGHER ..... 559 Descartes on Sense Qualities, JILL VANCE BUROKER .................. 585 A New Source of Spinozism: Franciscus Van den Enden, WIM KLEVEI~ . . 613 Was Schopenhauer an Idealist? DALE SNOW AND JIM SNOW .......... 633 NOTES AND DISCUSSIONS A Sellarsian Hume? DONALD LIVINGSTON ........................... 281 Hume's Critical Realism: A Reply to Livingston, fRED WILSON ......... 291 "And Time Does Justice to All the World": Ein unverGffentlichter Brief von David Hume an William Strahan, HEINER KLEMME ............... 657 BOOK REVIEWS Terence Irwin, Aristotle's First Principles, JOHN BUSSANICH ............. Antonina Alberti, Sensazione e realt& Epicuro e Gassendi, SYLVIA MURR ... [7o~] 115 1~6 CONTENTS FOR VOLUME XXlX (1991) 703 Eyjolfur Kjalar Emilsson, Plotinus on Sense-Perception: A Philosophical Study, JEROME P. SCHILLER .......................................... 118 William of Auvergne. The Trinity, or the First Principle (De Trinitate, seu de primo principio), NEIL LEWIS ........................................... IO8 Francisco Sanches (Franciscus Sanchez). That Nothing Is Known (Quod nihil scitur), EZEQUIEL DE OLASO ........................................... 109 William H. Huffman, Robert Fludd and the End of the Renaissance, BRUCE T. MORAN ......................................................... 111 G. A. J. Rogers and Alan Ryan, eds., Perspectives on Thomas Hobbes, MALCOLM JACK ........................................................... 113 Susan Bordo, The Flight to Objectivity: Essays on Cartesianism and Culture, RICHARD A. WATSON .......................................... 115 Desmond M. Clarke, Occult Powers and Hypotheses: Cartesian Natural Philosophy under Louis XIV, LYNN S. J o v .................................... 117 Richard H. Popkin, Isaac La Peyr~re (z596-i676): His Life, Work and Influence, L. E. GOODMAN ................................................ 119 Edwin Curley, Behind the Geometrical Method: A Reading of Spinoza's "Ethics" Lucia Lermond, The Form of Man: Human Essence in Spinoza's "Ethic," DIANE STEINBERG ..................................................... 123 Howard R. Cell and James I. MacAdam, Rousseau's Response to H obbes, A. e. MARTINICH .................................................... 125 Friedrich H6lderlin. Essays and Letters on Theory, ECKART FORSTER ........ 127 Norbert Waszek, The Scottish Enlightenment and Hegel's Accounts of "Civil Society," LAWRENCE S. STEPELEVICH ............................ 129 Willem A. deVries, Hegel's Theory of Mental Activity, MURRAY GREENE . . . 13o Patrick Murray, Marx's Theory of Scientific Knowledge, DAVID A. DUQUETTE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 132 Geoffrey Scarre, Logic and Reality in the Philosophy ofJohn Stuart Mill, WESLEY E. COOPER ..................................................... 133 Raymond D. Boisvert, Dewey's Metaphysics, SANDRA B. ROSENTHAL . . . . . 135 Jan Woleflski, Logic and Philosophy in the Lvov-Warsaw School, ALAN R. PERREIAH ...................................................... i37 Thomas C. Brickhouse and Nicholas D. Smith, Socrates on Trial C. D. C. Reeve, Socrates in the "Apology": An Essay on Plato's "'Apology of Socrates," MICHAEL L. MORGAN ................................. 297 Charles L. Griswold, Jr., ed., Platonic Writings, Platonic Readings, VICTORINO TEJERA ........................................................ 299 Jonathan Lear, Aristotle: The Desire to Understand, ROBERT FRIEDMAN . . . . 3OI Dermot Morgan, The Philosophy ofJohn Scottus Eriugena: A Study of ldealism in the Middle Ages, PAUL j. w. MILLER .............................. 302 Nicholas Grimaldi and Jean-Luc Marion, eds., Le Discours et sa m(thode. Colloque pour 35oe anniversaire du "Discours de la mdthode," RICHARD A. WATSON ....................................................... 304 Jules Steinberg, The Obsession of Thomas Hobbes: The English Civil War in Hobbes's Political Philosophy, PAUL j. JOHNSON ..................... 305 JOURNAL OF THE HISTORY OF PHILOSOPHY 29:4 OCTOBER i99 1 3o6 3o8 31o 704 W. M. Spellman, John Locke and the...

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