Preface
Introduction
Part Ⅰ Ancient Greek and Roman Period
1.Plato / From Republic
2.Herodotus / From The History of Herodotus
3.Aristotle / From Poetics
4.Epicurus / From Letter to Menoeceus
5.Plotinus / From On the Intellectual Beauty
6.Dionysius Longinus / From On the sublime
7.Quintus Hoaratius Flaccus / From Art of Poetry
8.Saint Augustine/ From The City of God
Part Ⅱ Renaissance Period
9.Petrarch / From To Marcus Tullius Cicero
10.Leonardo Bruni / From Panegyric to the City of Florence
11.Giovanni Pico della Mirandola / From Oration on the Dignity of Man
12.Desiderius Erasmus Roterodamus / From The Praise of Folly
13.Niccol6 Machiavelli / From The Prince
14.Sir Philip Sidney / From The Poet: Compared and Contrasted
With Historian and Philosopher
15.Rene Descartes / From Principia Philosophiae
16.Frances Bacon / From Novum Organum
17.Thomas Hobbes / From Leviathan
Part Ⅲ Modem Period
18.John Locke / From An Essay Concerning Human Understanding
19.Baruch Spinoza / From Ethics
20.Gottfried Leibniz / From A Philosopher's Creed
21.Giambattista Vico / From The New Science
22.George Berkeley / From Principals of Human Knowledge
23.Baron de Montesquieu / From The Spirit of Law
24.David Hume / FromA Treatise of Human Nature
25.Jean Jacques Rousseau / From The Social Contract (Book 1)
26.Adam Smith / From An Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations (Book1)
27.Immanuel Kant / From Critique of Pure Reason
28.Edmund Burke / From A Philosophical Enquiry into the Origin of Our Ideas of the Sublime and the Beautiful
29.Thomas Paine / From The Rights of Man
30.Thomas Jefferson / From Declaration oflndependence
31.Johann Wolfgang von Goethe / From The Sorrows of Young Werther
32.Friedrich Schiller / From On the Aesthetic Education of Man: In a Series of Letters
33.Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel / From The Science of Logic
34.Ralph Waldo Emerson / From History
35.John Stuart Mill / From On Liberty
36.Lewis Henry Morgan / From Ancient Society
37.Karl Heinrich Marx / From Capital
38.Herbert Spencer / From The Principles of Sociology1
39.Matthew Arnold / From The Function of Criticism at the Present Time
40.Leo Tolstoy / From WhatlsArt?
41.William James / From Pragmatism
42.Friedrich Wilhelm Nietzsche / From Thus Spake Zarathustra
43.John Bates Clark / From The Distribution of Wealth
44.Sir James George Frazer / From The Golden Bough
45.Sigrnund Freud / From Civilization and its Discontents
46.Ferdinand de Saussure / From Writings in General Linguistics
47.Franz Boas / From The Mind of Primitive Man
48.Edmund Gustav Albrecht Husserl / From Ideas: General Introduction to Pure Phenomenology
Part Ⅳ Contemporary Period
49.John Dewey / From On Democracy
50.George Santayana / From The Sense of Beauty: Being an Outline of Aesthetic Theory
51.Hermann Ebbinghaus / From Memory: A Contribution to Experimental Psychology
52.Bertrand Russell / FromA Free Man's Worship
53.Albert Einstein / From Why Socialism?
54.Elton Mayo / From The Human Problems of an Industrial Civilization
55.John Maynard Keynes / From The Economic Consequences of the Peace
56.Bronistaw Kasper Malinowski / From Magic, Science, and Religion
57.Georg Lukacs / From History and Class Consciousness
58.Martin Heidegger / From Being and Time
59.LudwigJosefJohannWittgenstein/FromTractatus Logico-Philosophicus
60.Robin George Collingwood / From The Idea of History
61.Hans-George Gadamer / From Truth and Method
62.Jean-Paul Charles Aymard Sartre / From Being and Nothingness
63.Claude Levi-Strauss / From The Savage Mind
64.JohnRawls/FromA Theory of Justice
65.Abraham Harold Maslow / FromA Theory of Human Motivation
66.Michel Foucault / FromArchaeology of Knowledge
67.Jean Piaget / From The Child's Conception of the World
68.AvramNoamChomsky/FromLanguageandMind
69.George P.Lakoff & Mark L.Johnson / From Philosophy in the Flesh
Part Ⅴ Ancient Chinese Period
70.Confucius / From The Analects
71.Laozi / From Dao De Jing
72.Mozi / From Mozi
73.Mencius / From Mencius