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Great books of the Western World
Publisher
Encyclopedia Britannica
Publication Date
[1955], c1952
Language
English
On Shelf
Newburgh Free Library - Adult Collection - Storage Nonfiction
082 GREAT v.19
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082 GREAT v.19
1 available
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Table of Contents
From the Book
1. The great conversation, by R. M. Hutchins.
2-3. The great ideas.
4. The Iliad of Homer. The Odyssey.
5. Aeschylus. Sophocles. Euripides. Aristophanes.
6. Herodotus. Thucydides.
7. Plato.
8-9. Aristotle.
10 Hippocrates. Galen.
11. Euclid. Archimedes. Appollonius of Perga. Nicomachus.
12. Lucretius. Epictetus. Marcus Aurelius.
13. Virgil.
14 Plutarch.
15. Tacitus.
16. Ptolemy. Copernicus. Kepler.
17. Plotinus. -18. Augustine.
19.-20. Thomas Aquinas.
21. Dante.
22. Chaucer.
23. Machiavelli. Hobbes.
24. Rabelais.
25. Montaigne.
26-27. Shakespeare. -28. Gilbert. Galileo. Harvey.
29. Cervantes.
30. Francis Bacon.
31. Descartes. Spinoza.
32. John Milton.
33. Pascal.
34. Newton. Huygens. -35. Locke. Berkeley. Hume.
36. Swift. Sterne.
37. Henry Fielding.
38 Montesquieu. Rousseau.
39. Adam Smith.
40-41. Gibbon.
42. Kant.
43. American state papers. The Federalist. J. S. Mill.
44. Boswell.
45. Lavoisier. Fourier. Faraday.
46. Hegel.
47. Goethe.
48. Melville.
49 Darwin.
50. Marx.
51. Tolstoy.
52. Dostoyevsky.
53. William James.
54. Freud.
v. 1. The great conversation : the substance of a liberal education / by Robert M. Hutchins: Great conversation: Tradition of the West
Modern times
Education and economics
Disappearance of liberal education
Experimental science
Education for all
Education of adults
Next great change
East and west
Letter to the reader
Possible approaches to this set
Ten years of reading in this set.
v. 2-3. Great ideas. v. 2.: Angel
Animal
Aristocracy
Art
Astronomy
Beauty
Being
Cause
Chance
Change
Citizen
Constitution
Courage
Custom and convention
Definition
Democracy
Desire
Dialectic
Duty
Education
Element
Emotion
Eternity
Evolution
Experience
Family
Fate
Form
God
Good and evil
Government
Habit
Happiness
History
Honor
Hypothesis
Idea
Immortality
Induction
Infinity
Judgment
Justice
Knowledge
Labor
Language
Law
Liberty
Life and death
Logic
Love
v. 3.: Man
Mathematics
Matter
Mechanics
Medicine
Memory and imagination
Metaphysics
Mind
Monarchy
Nature
Necessity and contingency
Oligarchy
One and many
Opinion
Opposition
Philosophy
Physics
Pleasure and pain
Poetry
Principle
Progress
Prophecy
Prudence
Punishment
Quality
Quantity
Reasoning
Relation
Religion
Revolution
Rhetoric
Same and other
Science
Sense
Sign and symbol
Sin
Slavery
Soul
Space
State
Temperance
Theology
Time
Truth
Tyranny
Universal and particular
Virtue and vice
War and peace
Wealth
Will
Wisdom
World.
v. 4. The Iliad and the Odyssey / Homer.
v. 5. Aeschylus, Sophocles, Euripides, Aristophanes: The plays of Aeschylus, translated into English verse by G.M. Cookson
The plays of Sophocles, translated into English prose by Sir R.C. Jebb
The plays of Euripides, translated into English prose by E.P. Coleridge.
The plays of Aristophanes, translated into English verse by B.B. Rogers.
v. 6. The history of Herodotus. [Translated by George Rawlinson]
The history of the Peloponnesian War / Thucydides.
v. 7. Dialogues
The seventh letter / Plato.
v. 8-9. Works: v. 8. Logic. (Organon). Categories (Categoriae)
On interpretation (De interpretatione)
Prior analytics (Analytica priora)
Posterior analytics (Analytica posteriora
Topics (Topica)
On sophistical refutations (De sophisticis elenchis)
Physical treatises. Physics (Physica)
On the heaven (De caelo)
On generation and corruption (De generatione et corruptione)
Meteorology (Meteorologica)
Metaphysics (Metaphysica)
On the soul (De anima)
Short physical treatises (Parva naturalia). On sense and the sensible (De sensu et sensibili)
On memory and reminiscence (De memoria et reminiscentia
On sleep and sleeplessness (De somno et vigilia)
On dreams (De somniis)
On prophesying by dreams (De divinatione per somnum)
On longevity and shortness of life (De longitudine et breviate vitae)
On youth and old age, On life and death, On breathing (De iuventate et senectute, De vita et morte, De respiratione)
v. 9. Biological treatises. History of animals (Historia animalium)
On the parts of animals (De partibus animalium)
On the motion of animals (De motu animalium)
On the gait of animals (De incessu animalium)
On the generation of animals (De generatione animalium)
Nicomachean ethics (Ethica Nicomachea)
Politics (Politica)
The Athenian constitution (Atheniensium respublica)
Rhetoric (Rhetorica)
On poetics (De poetica).
v. 10. Hippocratic writings / Hippocrates
On the natural faculties / Galen : The oath
On ancient medicine
On airs, waters, and places
The book of prognostics
On regimen in acute diseases
Of the epidemics
Of injuries of the head
On the surgery
On fractures
On the articulations
Instruments of reduction
Aphorisms
The law
On ulcers
On fistulae
On hemorrhoids
On the sacred disease.
v. 11. Thirteen books of Euclid's Elements / Euclid
Works of Archimedes, including the method / Archimedes
Conics / Apollonius of Perga
Introduction to arithmetic / Nicomachus of Gerasa.
v. 12. On the nature of things / Lucretius
Discourses of Epictetus / Epictetus
Meditations / Marcus Aurelius.
v. 13. Poems / Virgil: The Eclogues.
The Georgics.
The Aeneid.
v. 14. Lives of the noble Grecians and Romans: Theseus
Romulus
Romulus and Theseus compared
Lycurgus
Numa Pompilius
Lycurgus and Numa compared
Solon
Poplicola
Poplicola and Solon compared
Themistocles
Camillus
Pericles
Fabius
Fabius and Pericles compared
Alcibiades
Coriolanus
Alcibiades and Coriolanus compared
Timoleon
Aemilius Paulus
Aemilius Paulus and Timoleon compared
Pelopidas
Marcellus
Marcellus and Pelopidas compared
Aristides
Marcus Cato
Aristides and Marcus Cato compared
Philopoeman
Flamininus
Flamininus and Philopoeman compared
Pyrrhus
Caius Marius
Lysander
Sulla
Lysander and Sulla compared
Cimon
Lucullus
Cimon and Lucullus compared
Nicias
Crassus
Crassus and Nicias compared
Sertorius
Eumenus
Eumenus and Sertorius compared
Agesilaus
Pompey
Agesilaus and Pompey compared
Alexander
Caesar
Phocion
Cato the Younger
Agis
Cleomenes
Tiberius Gracchus
Caius Gracchus
Caius and Tiberius Gracchus and Agis and Cleomenes compared
Demosthenes
Cicero
Cicero and Demosthenes compared
Demetrius
Antony
Antony and Demetrius compared
Dion
Marcus Brutus
Brutus and Dion compared
Aratus
Artaxerxes
Galba
Otho.
v. 15. The annals
The histories / Cornelius Tacitus.
v. 16. The almagest / Ptolemy
On the revolutions of the heavenly spheres / Nicolaus Copernicus
Epitome of Copernican astronomy: IV and V
The harmonies of the world: V / Johannes Kepler
v. 17. Six Enneads: First Ennead: Tractate: Animate and the man
On virtue
On dialectic (the upward way)
On true happiness
Happiness and extension of time
Beauty
On the primal good and secondary forms of good (otherwise, "On happiness")
On the nature and source of evil
"Reasoned dismissal"
Second ennead: On the kosmos or the heavenly system
Heavenly circuit
Are the stars causes?
Matter in its two kinds
On potentiality and actuality
Quality and form-idea
On complete transfusion
Why distant objects appear small
Against those that affirm the creator of the kosmos and the kosmos itself to be evil (generally quoted as "Against the Gnostics")
Third ennead: Fate
On providence (1)
On providence (2)
Our tutelary spirit
On love
Impassivity of the unembodied
Time and eternity
Nature contemplation and the One
Detached considerations
Fourth ennead: On the essence of the soul (1)
On the essence of the soul (2) Problems of the soul (1)
Problems of the soul (2)
Problems of the soul (3) (also entitled "On sight")
Perception and memory
Immortality of the soul
Soul's descent into the body
Are all souls one?
Fifth ennead: Three initial hypostases
Origin and order of the beings following on the first
Knowing hypostases and the transcendent
How the secondaries arise from the first: and on the One
That the intellectual beings are not outside the intellectual principle: and on the nature of the good
That the principle transcending being has no intellectual act; what being has intellection primally and what has it secondarily
Is there an ideal archetype of particular beings?
On the intellectual beauty
Intellectual principle, the ideas, and authentic existence
Sixth ennead: On the kinds of being (1)
On the kinds of being (2)
On the kinds of being (3) On the integral omnipresence of the authentic existent (1)
On the integral omnipresence of the authentic existent (2)
On numbers
How the multiplicity of Ideal-forms came into being: and upon the good
On free-will and the will of the One
On the good, or the One / Plotinus.
v. 18. The confessions
The city of God
On Christian doctrine /Saint Augustine.
v. 19-20. The Summa theologica / Thomas Aquinas.
v. 21. The Divine comedy / Dante Alighieri.
v. 22. Troilus and Cressida and The Canterbury tales / Geoffrey Chaucer.
v. 23. The prince / Nicolao Machiavelli. [Translated by W.K. Marriott]
Leviathan; or, Matter, form, and power of a commonwealth, ecclesiastical and civil / Thomas Hobbes: Prince: How many kinds of principalities there are, and by what means they are aquired
Concerning hereditary principalities
Concerning mixed principalities
Why the kingdom of Darius, conquered by Alexander, did not rebel against the successors of Alexander at his death
Concerning the way to govern cities or principalities, which lived under their own laws before they were annexed
Concerning prinicipalities which are acquired by one's own arms and ability
Concerning new principalities which are acquired either by the arms of others or by good fortune
Concerning those who have obtained a principality by wickedness
Concerning a civil principality
Concerning the way in which the strength of all principalities ought to be measured
Concerning ecclesiastical principalities
How many kinds of soldiery there are and concerning mercenaries
Concerning auxiliaries, mixed soldiery, and one's own
That which concerns a prince on the subject of the art of war
Concerning things for which men, and especially princes, are praised or blamed
Concerning liberality and meaness
Concerning cruelty and clemency, and whether it is better to be loved than feared
Concerning the way in which princes should keep the faith
That one should avoid being despised and hated
Are fortresses, and many other things to which princes resort, advantageous or hurtful?
How a prince should conduct himself so as to gain renown
Concerning the secretaries of princes
How flatterers should by avoided
Why the princes of Italy have lost their states
What fortune can effect in human affairs, and how to withstand her
Exhortation to liberate Italy from the barbarians
Leviathan / Thomas Hobbes.
v. 24. Gargantua
Pantagruel / Rabelais.
v. 25. Essays / Michele de Montaigne.
v. 26. Plays and sonnets: Part 1-3 of King Henry the Sixth
The tragedy of King Richard the Third
The comedy of errors
Titus Andronicus
The taming of the shrew
Two gentlemen of Verona
Love's labour's lost
Romeo and Juliet
The tragedy of King Richard the Second
A midummer's-night dream
The life and death of King John
The merchant of Venice
Part 1-2 of King Henry the Fourth
Much ado about nothing
The life of King Henry the Fifth
Julius Caesar
As you like it.
v. 27: Twelfth night; or, What you will
Hamlet, Prince of Denmark
The merry wives of Windsor
Troilus and Cressida
All's well that ends well
Measure for measure
Othello, the moor of Venice
King Lear
Macbeth
Antony and Cleopatra
Coriolanus
Timon of Athens
Pericles, Prince of Tyre
Cymbeline
The winter's tale
The tempest
The famous history of the lif of King Henry the Eighth
Sonnets.
v. 28. On the Loadstone and Magnetic Bodies and on the Great Magnet the Earth / William Gilbert
Dialogues Concerning the Two New Sciences / Galileo Galilei
Anatomical Disquisition on the Motion of the Heart and Blood in Animals /William Harvey
First Anatomical Disquisition on the Circulation of the Blood / William Harvey
Second Disquisition to John Riolan, in which Many Objections to the Circulation of the Blood Are Refuted / William Harvey
Anatomical Exercises on the Generation of Animals / William Harvey.
v. 29. The history of Don Quixote de la Mancha / Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra.
v. 30. Advancement of learning
Novum organum
New Atlantis / Francis Bacon.
v. 31. Rules for the direction of the mind
Discourse on the method
Meditations on first philosophy
Objections against the meditations and replies
The geometry /Renae Descartes
Ethics / Spinoza.
v. 32. English minor poems. Paradise lost. Samson Agonistes. Areopagitica / John Milton: Miscellaneous poems: On the morning of Christ's Nativity
Hymn
Paraphrase on Psalm 114
Psalm 136
Passion
On time
Upon the circumcision
At a solemn musick
Epitaph on the Marchioness of Winchester
Song on May morning
On Shakespear, 1630
On the University Carrier
Another on the same
L'Allegro
Il penseroso
Arcades
Lycidas
Comus
Poems added in the 1673 Edition: On the death of a fair infant
At a vacation exercise
Fifth ode of Horace, lib. 1
Sonnets: VII-XIX
On the new forcers of conscience under the Long Parliament
On the Lord Gen. Fairfax at the seige of Colchester
To the Lord Generall Cromwell, May 1652
To Sr. Henry Vane the younger
To Mr. Cyriack Skinner upon his blindness
Psalms: I-VIII
LXXX-LXXXVIII
Paradise Lost
Samson Agonistes
Areopagitica.
v. 33. The provincial letters
Pensaees / Blaise Pascal :Provincial letters: Letter I
Letter II
Reply of the "provincial" to the first two letters
Letter III
Letter IV
Letter V
Letter VI
Letter VII
Letter VIII
Letter IX
Letter X
Letter XI
Letter XII
Letter XIII
Letter XIV
Letter XV
Letter XVI
Letter XVII
Letter XVIII
Fragment of a nineteenth provincial letter, addressed to Father Annat
Pensees
Scientific treatises.
v. 34. Mathematical principles of natural philosophy: Book I: Method of first and last ratios
Determination of centripetal forces
Motion of bodies in eccentric conic sections
Finding of elliptic, parabolic, and hyperbolic orbits from the focus given
How the orbits are to be found when neither focus is given
How the motions are to be found in given orbits
Rectilinear ascent and descent of bodies
Determination of orbits in which bodies will revolve, being acted upon by any sort of centripetal force
Motion of bodies in movable orbits; and the motion of the apsides
Motion of bodies in given surfaces; and the oscillating pendulous motion of bodies
Motions of bodies tending to each other with centripetal forces
Attractive forces of spherical bodies
Attractive forces of bodies which are not spherical
Motion of very small bodies when agitated by centripetal forces tending to the several parts of any very great body
Book II: Motion of bodies (In resisting mediums): Motion of bodies that are resisted in the ratio of the velocity
Motion of bodies that are resisted as the square of their velocities
Motion of bodies that are resisted partly in the ratio of the velocities, and partly as the square of the same ratio
Circular motion of bodies in resisting mediums
Density and compression of fluids; hydrostatics
Motion and resistance of pendulous bodies
Motion of fluids and the resistance made to projected bodies
Motion propagated through fluids
Circular motion of fluids
Book III: System of the world (In mathematical treatment): Rules of reasoning in philosophy
Phenomena
Propositions
Motion of the moon's nodes
General Scholium / Sir Isaac Newton
Optics / Sir Isaac Newton
Treatise on light / Christiaan Huygens.
v. 35. A letter concerning toleration
Concerning civil government, second essay
An essay concerning human understanding / John Locke
The principles of human knowledge / George Berkeley.
An enquiry concerning human understanding , by David Hume.
v. 36. Gulliver's travels / Jonathan Swift.
v. 37. The history of Tom Jones, a foundling / Henry Fielding.
v. 38. Book I: Of laws in general
Book II: Of laws directly derived from the nature of government
Book III: Of the principles of the three kinds of government
Book IV: That the laws of education ought to be in relation to the principles of government
Book V: That the laws given by the legislator ought to be in relation to the principle of government
Book VI: Consequences of the principles of different governments with respect to the simplicity of civil and criminal laws, the form of judgments, and the inflicting of punishments
Book VII: Consequences of the different principles of the three governments with respect to sumptuary laws, luxury and the condition of women
Book VIII: Of the corruption of the principles of the three governments
Book IX: Of the laws in the relation that bear to a defensive force
Book X: Of laws in the relation that bear to offensive force
Book XI: Of the laws which establish political liberty, with regard to the constitution
Book XII: Of the laws that form political liberty, in relation to the subject: Idea of this book
Book XIII: Of the relation which the levying of taxes and the greatness of the public revenues bear to liberty
Book XIV: Of laws in relation to the nature of the climate
Book XV: In what manner the laws of civil slavery relate to the nature of the climate
Book XVI: How the laws of domestic slavery bear a relation to the nature of the climate
Book XVII: How the laws of political servitude bear a relation to the nature of the climate
Book XVIII: Of laws in the relation they bear to the nature of the soil
Book XIX: Of laws in relation to the principles which form the general spirit, morals, and customs of a nation
Book XX: Of laws in relation to commerce, considered in its nature and distinctions
Book XXI: Of laws in relation to commerce, considered in the revolutions it has met with in the world
Book XXII: Of laws in relation to the use of money
Book XXIII: Of laws in the relation they bear to the number of inhabitants
Book XXIV: Of laws in relation to religion, considered in itself, and in its doctrine
Book XXV: Of laws in relation to the establishment of religion and its external polity
Book XXVI: Of laws in relation to the order of things which they determine
Book XXVII: Of the origin and revolutions of the Roman law on successions
Book XXVIII: Of the origin and revolutions of the civil laws among the French
Book XXIX: Of the manner of composing the laws
Book XXX: Theory of the feudal laws amonth the Franks in the relation they bear to the establishment of the monarchy
Book XXXI: Theory of the feudal laws among the Franks in relation they bear to the revolutions of their monarchy.
v. 39. An inquiry into the nature and causes of the wealth of nations: Book One: Of the causes of improvement in the productive power of labour, and of the order according to which its produce is naturally distributed among the different ranks of the people: Of the division of labour
Of the principle which gives occasion to the division of labour
That the division of labour is limited by the extent of the market
Of the origin and use of money
Of the real and nominal price of commodities, or their price in labour and their price in money
Of the component parts of the price of commodities
Of the natural and market price of commodities
Of the wages of labour
Of the profits of stock
Of wages and profit in the different employments of labour and stock
Of the rent of land
Book Two: Of the nature, accumulation and employment of stock: Of the division of stock
Of money considered as a particular branch of the general stock of the society or of the expense of maintaining the national capital
Of the accumulation of capital, or of productive and unproductive labour
Of stock lent at interest
Of the different employment of capitals
Book Three: Of the different progress of opulence in different nations: Of the natural progress of opulence
Of the discouragement of agriculture in the ancient state of Europe after the fall of the Roman Empire
Of the rise and progress of cities and towns after the fall of the Roman Empire
How the commerce of the towns contributed to the improvement of the country
Book Four: Of systems of political economy: Of the principle of the commercial, or mercantile system
Of restraints upon the importation from foreign countries of such goods as can be produced at home
Of the extraordinary restraints upon the importation of goods of almost all kinds from those countries with which the balance is supposed to be disadvantageous
Of drawbacks
Of bounties
Of treaties of commerce
Of colonies
Conclusion of the mercantile system
Of the agricultural systems, or of those systems of political economy which represent the produce of land as either the sole or the principal source of the revenue and wealth of every country
Book Five: Of the revenue of the sovereign or commonwealth: Of the expenses of the sovereign or commonwealth
Of the sources of the general or public revenue of the society
Of public debts /Adam Smith.
v. 40-41. The decline and fall of the Roman Empire / Edward Gibbon.
v. 42. The critique of pure reason
The critique of practical reason, and other ethical treatises
The critique of judgement / Immanuel Kant.
v. 43. American state papers: Declaration of independence, Articles of confederation and the Constitution
The Federalist / Alexander Hamilton, James Madison [and] John Jay
On liberty, Representative government [and] Utilitarianism / John Stuart Mill.
v. 44. Life of Samuel Johnson, LL. D. / James Boswell.
v. 45. Elements of Chemistry: Of the formation and decomposition of aeriform fluids, of the combustion of simple bodies, and the formation of acids
Of the combination of acids with salifiable bases, and of the formation of neutral salts
Description of the instruments and operations of chemistry / Antoine Laurent Lavoisier
Analytical theory of heat / Jean Baptiste Joseph Fourier
Experimental researches in electricity / Michael Faraday.
v. 46. The philosophy of right / Gerog Hegel.
v. 47. Faust: Dedication
Prelude on the state
Prologue in heaven
First Part: Night, Faust in his study
Outside the gate of the town
Faust's study (1)
Faust's study (2): Mephistopheles and the student
Auerbach's cellar
Witch's kitchen
Faust and Gretchen: Street
Evening
Promenade
Neighbour's house
Street
Garden
Garden house
Forest and cavern
Gretchen's room
Martha's garden
At the well
Ramparts
Night, before Gretchen's door
Cathedral
Walpurgis night
Walpurgis night's dream
Dismal day
Night, an open field
Prison
Second part: Act I: Pleasant landscape
Emperor's palace
Spacious hall, masquerade
Pleasure garden
Dark gallery
Brightly lighted halls
Hall of the knights
Act II: High-vaulted, narrow, gothic chamber
Mephistopheles and the bachelor of arts
Laboratory
Classical Walpurgis night: Pharsalian fields
By the upper peneus
By the lower peneus
By the upper peneus as before
Rocky coves of the Aegean Sea
Act III: Before the Palace of Menelaus in Sparta
Inner court of Faust's castle
Arcadia
Act IV: High mouontain range
On the headland
Rival emperor's tent
Act V: Open country
Palace
Deep night
Midnight
Great outer court of the palace
Burial
Mountain gorges: Heaven / Johann Goethe.
v. 48. Moby Dick : or, The Whale / Herman Melville.
v. 49. The origin of species by means of natural selection. The descent of man and selection in relation to sex / Charles Darwin.
v. 50. Capital / Karl Marx
Manifesto of the Communist Party / Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels : Capital / Karl Marx: Commodities and money: Commodities
Exchange
Money, or the circulation of commodities
Transformation of money into capital: General formula for capital
Contradictions in the general formula of capital
Buying and selling of labour-power
Production of absolute surplus value: Labour process and the process of producing surplus value
Constant capital and variable capital
Rate of surplus value
Working day
Rate and mass of surplus value
Production of relative surplus value: Concept of relative surplus value
Cooperation
Division of labour and manufacture
Machinery and modern industry
Production of absolute and of relative surplus value
Absolute and relative surplus value
Changes of magnitude in the price of labour power and in surplus value
Various formulae for the rate of surplus value
Wages: Transformation of the value (and respectively the price) of labour power into wages
Time-wages
Piece-wages
National differences of wages
Accumulation of capital: Simple reproduction
Conversion of surplus value into capital
General law of capitalist accumulation
So-called primitive accumulation: Secret of primitive accumulation
Expropriation of the agricultural population from the land
Bloody legislation against the expropriated, from the end of the fifteenth century; forcing down of wages by acts of Parliament
Genesis of the capitalist farmer
Reaction of the agricultural revolution on industry; creation of the home market for industrial capital
Genesis of the industrial capitalist
Historical tendency of capitalistic accumulation
Modern theory of colonization
Manifesto of the Communist Party / Karl Marx & Friedrich Engels.
v. 51. War and peace / Leo Tolstoy.
v. 52. Brothers Karamazov: Part I: Book I: History of a family: Fyodor Pavlovitch Karamazov
He gets rid of his eldest son
Second marriage, and the second family
Third son, Alyosha
Elders
Book II: Unfortunate gathering: They arrive at the monastery
Old Buffoon
Peasant women who have faith
Lady of little faith
So be it! So be it!
Why is such a man alive/ Young man bent on a career
Scandalous scene
Book III: Sensualists: In the servants' quarters
Lizaveta
Confession of a passionate heart- in verse
Confession of a passionate heart- in anecdote
Confession of a passionate heart- "Heels up"
Smerdyakov
Controversy
Over the brandy
Sensualists
Both together
Another reputation ruined
Part II: Book IV: Lacerations: Father Ferapont
At his father's
Meeting with the schoolboys
At the Hohlakovs'
Laceration in the drawing-room
Laceration in the cottage
And in the open air
Book V: Pro and contra: Engagement
Smerdyakov with a guitar
Brothers make friends
Rebellion
Grand Inquisitor
For awhile a very obscure one
"It's always worth while speaking to a clever man"
Book VI: Russian monk: Father Zossima and his visitors
Recollection of Father Zossima's youth before he became a monk; duel
Conversations and Exhortations of Father Zossima
Part III: Book VII: Alyosha: Breath of corruption
Critical moment
Onion
Cana of Galilee
Book VIII: Mitya: Kuzma Samsonov
Lyagavy
Gold mines
In the dark
Sudden resolution
"I am coming, too!"
First and rightful lover
Delirium
Book IX: Preliminary investigation: Beginning of Perhotin's official career
Alarm
Sufferings of a soul; first ordeal
Second ordeal
Third ordeal
Prosecutor catches Mitya
Mitya's great secret; received with hisses
Evidence of the witnesses; babe
They carry Mitya away
Part IV: Book X: Boys
Kolya Krassotkin
Children
Schoolboy
Lost dog
By Ilusha's bedside
Precocity
Ilusha
Book XI: Ivan: At Grushenka's
Injured foot
Little demon
Hymn and a secret
Not you, not you!
First interview with Smerdyakov
Second interview with Smerdyakov
Third and last interview with Smerdyakov
Devil; Ivan's nightmare
"It was he who said that"
Book XII: Judicial error: Fatal day
Dangerous witnesses
Medical experts and a pound of nuts
Fortune smiles on Mitya
Sudden catastrophe
Prosecutor's speech; sketches of character
Historical survey
Treatise on Smerdyakov
Galloping Troika; End of the prosecutor's speech
Speech for the defense; an argument that cuts both ways
There was no money; there was no robbery
And there was no murder either
Corrupter of thought
Peasants stand firm
Epilogue: Plans for Mitya's escape
For a moment the lie becomes the truth
Ilusha's funeral; speech at the stone /Fyodor Dostoyevsky.
v. 53. Principles of psychology: Scope of psychology
Functions of the brain
On some general conditions of brain-activity
Habit
Automaton-theory
Mind-stuff theory
Methods and snares of psychology
Relations of minds to other things
Stream of thought
Consciousness of self
Attention
Conception
Discrimination and comparison
Association
Perception of time
Memory
Sensation
Imagination
Perception of "things"
Perception of space
Perception of reality
Reasoning
Production of movement
Instinct
Emotions
Will
Hypnotism
Necessary truths and the effects of experience.
v. 54. Major works / Sigmund Freud.
From the Book
1. The great conversation, by R. M. Hutchins.
2-3. The great ideas.
4. The Iliad of Homer. The Odyssey.
5. Aeschylus. Sophocles. Euripides. Aristophanes.
6. Herodotus. Thucydides.
7. Plato.
8-9. Aristotle.
10 Hippocrates. Galen.
11. Euclid. Archimedes. Appollonius of Perga. Nicomachus.
12. Lucretius. Epictetus. Marcus Aurelius.
13. Virgil.
14 Plutarch.
15. Tacitus.
16. Ptolemy. Copernicus. Kepler.
17. Plotinus. -18. Augustine.
19.-20. Thomas Aquinas.
21. Dante.
22. Chaucer.
23. Machiavelli. Hobbes.
24. Rabelais.
25. Montaigne.
26-27. Shakespeare. -28. Gilbert. Galileo. Harvey.
29. Cervantes.
30. Francis Bacon.
31. Descartes. Spinoza.
32. John Milton.
33. Pascal.
34. Newton. Huygens. -35. Locke. Berkeley. Hume.
36. Swift. Sterne.
37. Henry Fielding.
38 Montesquieu. Rousseau.
39. Adam Smith.
40-41. Gibbon.
42. Kant.
43. American state papers. The Federalist. J. S. Mill.
44. Boswell.
45. Lavoisier. Fourier. Faraday.
46. Hegel.
47. Goethe.
48. Melville.
49 Darwin.
50. Marx.
51. Tolstoy.
52. Dostoyevsky.
53. William James.
54. Freud.
v. 1. The great conversation : the substance of a liberal education / by Robert M. Hutchins: Great conversation: Tradition of the West
Modern times
Education and economics
Disappearance of liberal education
Experimental science
Education for all
Education of adults
Next great change
East and west
Letter to the reader
Possible approaches to this set
Ten years of reading in this set.
v. 2-3. Great ideas. v. 2.: Angel
Animal
Aristocracy
Art
Astronomy
Beauty
Being
Cause
Chance
Change
Citizen
Constitution
Courage
Custom and convention
Definition
Democracy
Desire
Dialectic
Duty
Education
Element
Emotion
Eternity
Evolution
Experience
Family
Fate
Form
God
Good and evil
Government
Habit
Happiness
History
Honor
Hypothesis
Idea
Immortality
Induction
Infinity
Judgment
Justice
Knowledge
Labor
Language
Law
Liberty
Life and death
Logic
Love
v. 3.: Man
Mathematics
Matter
Mechanics
Medicine
Memory and imagination
Metaphysics
Mind
Monarchy
Nature
Necessity and contingency
Oligarchy
One and many
Opinion
Opposition
Philosophy
Physics
Pleasure and pain
Poetry
Principle
Progress
Prophecy
Prudence
Punishment
Quality
Quantity
Reasoning
Relation
Religion
Revolution
Rhetoric
Same and other
Science
Sense
Sign and symbol
Sin
Slavery
Soul
Space
State
Temperance
Theology
Time
Truth
Tyranny
Universal and particular
Virtue and vice
War and peace
Wealth
Will
Wisdom
World.
v. 4. The Iliad and the Odyssey / Homer.
v. 5. Aeschylus, Sophocles, Euripides, Aristophanes: The plays of Aeschylus, translated into English verse by G.M. Cookson
The plays of Sophocles, translated into English prose by Sir R.C. Jebb
The plays of Euripides, translated into English prose by E.P. Coleridge.
The plays of Aristophanes, translated into English verse by B.B. Rogers.
v. 6. The history of Herodotus. [Translated by George Rawlinson]
The history of the Peloponnesian War / Thucydides.
v. 7. Dialogues
The seventh letter / Plato.
v. 8-9. Works: v. 8. Logic. (Organon). Categories (Categoriae)
On interpretation (De interpretatione)
Prior analytics (Analytica priora)
Posterior analytics (Analytica posteriora
Topics (Topica)
On sophistical refutations (De sophisticis elenchis)
Physical treatises. Physics (Physica)
On the heaven (De caelo)
On generation and corruption (De generatione et corruptione)
Meteorology (Meteorologica)
Metaphysics (Metaphysica)
On the soul (De anima)
Short physical treatises (Parva naturalia). On sense and the sensible (De sensu et sensibili)
On memory and reminiscence (De memoria et reminiscentia
On sleep and sleeplessness (De somno et vigilia)
On dreams (De somniis)
On prophesying by dreams (De divinatione per somnum)
On longevity and shortness of life (De longitudine et breviate vitae)
On youth and old age, On life and death, On breathing (De iuventate et senectute, De vita et morte, De respiratione)
v. 9. Biological treatises. History of animals (Historia animalium)
On the parts of animals (De partibus animalium)
On the motion of animals (De motu animalium)
On the gait of animals (De incessu animalium)
On the generation of animals (De generatione animalium)
Nicomachean ethics (Ethica Nicomachea)
Politics (Politica)
The Athenian constitution (Atheniensium respublica)
Rhetoric (Rhetorica)
On poetics (De poetica).
v. 10. Hippocratic writings / Hippocrates
On the natural faculties / Galen : The oath
On ancient medicine
On airs, waters, and places
The book of prognostics
On regimen in acute diseases
Of the epidemics
Of injuries of the head
On the surgery
On fractures
On the articulations
Instruments of reduction
Aphorisms
The law
On ulcers
On fistulae
On hemorrhoids
On the sacred disease.
v. 11. Thirteen books of Euclid's Elements / Euclid
Works of Archimedes, including the method / Archimedes
Conics / Apollonius of Perga
Introduction to arithmetic / Nicomachus of Gerasa.
v. 12. On the nature of things / Lucretius
Discourses of Epictetus / Epictetus
Meditations / Marcus Aurelius.
v. 13. Poems / Virgil: The Eclogues.
The Georgics.
The Aeneid.
v. 14. Lives of the noble Grecians and Romans: Theseus
Romulus
Romulus and Theseus compared
Lycurgus
Numa Pompilius
Lycurgus and Numa compared
Solon
Poplicola
Poplicola and Solon compared
Themistocles
Camillus
Pericles
Fabius
Fabius and Pericles compared
Alcibiades
Coriolanus
Alcibiades and Coriolanus compared
Timoleon
Aemilius Paulus
Aemilius Paulus and Timoleon compared
Pelopidas
Marcellus
Marcellus and Pelopidas compared
Aristides
Marcus Cato
Aristides and Marcus Cato compared
Philopoeman
Flamininus
Flamininus and Philopoeman compared
Pyrrhus
Caius Marius
Lysander
Sulla
Lysander and Sulla compared
Cimon
Lucullus
Cimon and Lucullus compared
Nicias
Crassus
Crassus and Nicias compared
Sertorius
Eumenus
Eumenus and Sertorius compared
Agesilaus
Pompey
Agesilaus and Pompey compared
Alexander
Caesar
Phocion
Cato the Younger
Agis
Cleomenes
Tiberius Gracchus
Caius Gracchus
Caius and Tiberius Gracchus and Agis and Cleomenes compared
Demosthenes
Cicero
Cicero and Demosthenes compared
Demetrius
Antony
Antony and Demetrius compared
Dion
Marcus Brutus
Brutus and Dion compared
Aratus
Artaxerxes
Galba
Otho.
v. 15. The annals
The histories / Cornelius Tacitus.
v. 16. The almagest / Ptolemy
On the revolutions of the heavenly spheres / Nicolaus Copernicus
Epitome of Copernican astronomy: IV and V
The harmonies of the world: V / Johannes Kepler
v. 17. Six Enneads: First Ennead: Tractate: Animate and the man
On virtue
On dialectic (the upward way)
On true happiness
Happiness and extension of time
Beauty
On the primal good and secondary forms of good (otherwise, "On happiness")
On the nature and source of evil
"Reasoned dismissal"
Second ennead: On the kosmos or the heavenly system
Heavenly circuit
Are the stars causes?
Matter in its two kinds
On potentiality and actuality
Quality and form-idea
On complete transfusion
Why distant objects appear small
Against those that affirm the creator of the kosmos and the kosmos itself to be evil (generally quoted as "Against the Gnostics")
Third ennead: Fate
On providence (1)
On providence (2)
Our tutelary spirit
On love
Impassivity of the unembodied
Time and eternity
Nature contemplation and the One
Detached considerations
Fourth ennead: On the essence of the soul (1)
On the essence of the soul (2) Problems of the soul (1)
Problems of the soul (2)
Problems of the soul (3) (also entitled "On sight")
Perception and memory
Immortality of the soul
Soul's descent into the body
Are all souls one?
Fifth ennead: Three initial hypostases
Origin and order of the beings following on the first
Knowing hypostases and the transcendent
How the secondaries arise from the first: and on the One
That the intellectual beings are not outside the intellectual principle: and on the nature of the good
That the principle transcending being has no intellectual act; what being has intellection primally and what has it secondarily
Is there an ideal archetype of particular beings?
On the intellectual beauty
Intellectual principle, the ideas, and authentic existence
Sixth ennead: On the kinds of being (1)
On the kinds of being (2)
On the kinds of being (3) On the integral omnipresence of the authentic existent (1)
On the integral omnipresence of the authentic existent (2)
On numbers
How the multiplicity of Ideal-forms came into being: and upon the good
On free-will and the will of the One
On the good, or the One / Plotinus.
v. 18. The confessions
The city of God
On Christian doctrine /Saint Augustine.
v. 19-20. The Summa theologica / Thomas Aquinas.
v. 21. The Divine comedy / Dante Alighieri.
v. 22. Troilus and Cressida and The Canterbury tales / Geoffrey Chaucer.
v. 23. The prince / Nicolao Machiavelli. [Translated by W.K. Marriott]
Leviathan; or, Matter, form, and power of a commonwealth, ecclesiastical and civil / Thomas Hobbes: Prince: How many kinds of principalities there are, and by what means they are aquired
Concerning hereditary principalities
Concerning mixed principalities
Why the kingdom of Darius, conquered by Alexander, did not rebel against the successors of Alexander at his death
Concerning the way to govern cities or principalities, which lived under their own laws before they were annexed
Concerning prinicipalities which are acquired by one's own arms and ability
Concerning new principalities which are acquired either by the arms of others or by good fortune
Concerning those who have obtained a principality by wickedness
Concerning a civil principality
Concerning the way in which the strength of all principalities ought to be measured
Concerning ecclesiastical principalities
How many kinds of soldiery there are and concerning mercenaries
Concerning auxiliaries, mixed soldiery, and one's own
That which concerns a prince on the subject of the art of war
Concerning things for which men, and especially princes, are praised or blamed
Concerning liberality and meaness
Concerning cruelty and clemency, and whether it is better to be loved than feared
Concerning the way in which princes should keep the faith
That one should avoid being despised and hated
Are fortresses, and many other things to which princes resort, advantageous or hurtful?
How a prince should conduct himself so as to gain renown
Concerning the secretaries of princes
How flatterers should by avoided
Why the princes of Italy have lost their states
What fortune can effect in human affairs, and how to withstand her
Exhortation to liberate Italy from the barbarians
Leviathan / Thomas Hobbes.
v. 24. Gargantua
Pantagruel / Rabelais.
v. 25. Essays / Michele de Montaigne.
v. 26. Plays and sonnets: Part 1-3 of King Henry the Sixth
The tragedy of King Richard the Third
The comedy of errors
Titus Andronicus
The taming of the shrew
Two gentlemen of Verona
Love's labour's lost
Romeo and Juliet
The tragedy of King Richard the Second
A midummer's-night dream
The life and death of King John
The merchant of Venice
Part 1-2 of King Henry the Fourth
Much ado about nothing
The life of King Henry the Fifth
Julius Caesar
As you like it.
v. 27: Twelfth night; or, What you will
Hamlet, Prince of Denmark
The merry wives of Windsor
Troilus and Cressida
All's well that ends well
Measure for measure
Othello, the moor of Venice
King Lear
Macbeth
Antony and Cleopatra
Coriolanus
Timon of Athens
Pericles, Prince of Tyre
Cymbeline
The winter's tale
The tempest
The famous history of the lif of King Henry the Eighth
Sonnets.
v. 28. On the Loadstone and Magnetic Bodies and on the Great Magnet the Earth / William Gilbert
Dialogues Concerning the Two New Sciences / Galileo Galilei
Anatomical Disquisition on the Motion of the Heart and Blood in Animals /William Harvey
First Anatomical Disquisition on the Circulation of the Blood / William Harvey
Second Disquisition to John Riolan, in which Many Objections to the Circulation of the Blood Are Refuted / William Harvey
Anatomical Exercises on the Generation of Animals / William Harvey.
v. 29. The history of Don Quixote de la Mancha / Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra.
v. 30. Advancement of learning
Novum organum
New Atlantis / Francis Bacon.
v. 31. Rules for the direction of the mind
Discourse on the method
Meditations on first philosophy
Objections against the meditations and replies
The geometry /Renae Descartes
Ethics / Spinoza.
v. 32. English minor poems. Paradise lost. Samson Agonistes. Areopagitica / John Milton: Miscellaneous poems: On the morning of Christ's Nativity
Hymn
Paraphrase on Psalm 114
Psalm 136
Passion
On time
Upon the circumcision
At a solemn musick
Epitaph on the Marchioness of Winchester
Song on May morning
On Shakespear, 1630
On the University Carrier
Another on the same
L'Allegro
Il penseroso
Arcades
Lycidas
Comus
Poems added in the 1673 Edition: On the death of a fair infant
At a vacation exercise
Fifth ode of Horace, lib. 1
Sonnets: VII-XIX
On the new forcers of conscience under the Long Parliament
On the Lord Gen. Fairfax at the seige of Colchester
To the Lord Generall Cromwell, May 1652
To Sr. Henry Vane the younger
To Mr. Cyriack Skinner upon his blindness
Psalms: I-VIII
LXXX-LXXXVIII
Paradise Lost
Samson Agonistes
Areopagitica.
v. 33. The provincial letters
Pensaees / Blaise Pascal :Provincial letters: Letter I
Letter II
Reply of the "provincial" to the first two letters
Letter III
Letter IV
Letter V
Letter VI
Letter VII
Letter VIII
Letter IX
Letter X
Letter XI
Letter XII
Letter XIII
Letter XIV
Letter XV
Letter XVI
Letter XVII
Letter XVIII
Fragment of a nineteenth provincial letter, addressed to Father Annat
Pensees
Scientific treatises.
v. 34. Mathematical principles of natural philosophy: Book I: Method of first and last ratios
Determination of centripetal forces
Motion of bodies in eccentric conic sections
Finding of elliptic, parabolic, and hyperbolic orbits from the focus given
How the orbits are to be found when neither focus is given
How the motions are to be found in given orbits
Rectilinear ascent and descent of bodies
Determination of orbits in which bodies will revolve, being acted upon by any sort of centripetal force
Motion of bodies in movable orbits; and the motion of the apsides
Motion of bodies in given surfaces; and the oscillating pendulous motion of bodies
Motions of bodies tending to each other with centripetal forces
Attractive forces of spherical bodies
Attractive forces of bodies which are not spherical
Motion of very small bodies when agitated by centripetal forces tending to the several parts of any very great body
Book II: Motion of bodies (In resisting mediums): Motion of bodies that are resisted in the ratio of the velocity
Motion of bodies that are resisted as the square of their velocities
Motion of bodies that are resisted partly in the ratio of the velocities, and partly as the square of the same ratio
Circular motion of bodies in resisting mediums
Density and compression of fluids; hydrostatics
Motion and resistance of pendulous bodies
Motion of fluids and the resistance made to projected bodies
Motion propagated through fluids
Circular motion of fluids
Book III: System of the world (In mathematical treatment): Rules of reasoning in philosophy
Phenomena
Propositions
Motion of the moon's nodes
General Scholium / Sir Isaac Newton
Optics / Sir Isaac Newton
Treatise on light / Christiaan Huygens.
v. 35. A letter concerning toleration
Concerning civil government, second essay
An essay concerning human understanding / John Locke
The principles of human knowledge / George Berkeley.
An enquiry concerning human understanding , by David Hume.
v. 36. Gulliver's travels / Jonathan Swift.
v. 37. The history of Tom Jones, a foundling / Henry Fielding.
v. 38. Book I: Of laws in general
Book II: Of laws directly derived from the nature of government
Book III: Of the principles of the three kinds of government
Book IV: That the laws of education ought to be in relation to the principles of government
Book V: That the laws given by the legislator ought to be in relation to the principle of government
Book VI: Consequences of the principles of different governments with respect to the simplicity of civil and criminal laws, the form of judgments, and the inflicting of punishments
Book VII: Consequences of the different principles of the three governments with respect to sumptuary laws, luxury and the condition of women
Book VIII: Of the corruption of the principles of the three governments
Book IX: Of the laws in the relation that bear to a defensive force
Book X: Of laws in the relation that bear to offensive force
Book XI: Of the laws which establish political liberty, with regard to the constitution
Book XII: Of the laws that form political liberty, in relation to the subject: Idea of this book
Book XIII: Of the relation which the levying of taxes and the greatness of the public revenues bear to liberty
Book XIV: Of laws in relation to the nature of the climate
Book XV: In what manner the laws of civil slavery relate to the nature of the climate
Book XVI: How the laws of domestic slavery bear a relation to the nature of the climate
Book XVII: How the laws of political servitude bear a relation to the nature of the climate
Book XVIII: Of laws in the relation they bear to the nature of the soil
Book XIX: Of laws in relation to the principles which form the general spirit, morals, and customs of a nation
Book XX: Of laws in relation to commerce, considered in its nature and distinctions
Book XXI: Of laws in relation to commerce, considered in the revolutions it has met with in the world
Book XXII: Of laws in relation to the use of money
Book XXIII: Of laws in the relation they bear to the number of inhabitants
Book XXIV: Of laws in relation to religion, considered in itself, and in its doctrine
Book XXV: Of laws in relation to the establishment of religion and its external polity
Book XXVI: Of laws in relation to the order of things which they determine
Book XXVII: Of the origin and revolutions of the Roman law on successions
Book XXVIII: Of the origin and revolutions of the civil laws among the French
Book XXIX: Of the manner of composing the laws
Book XXX: Theory of the feudal laws amonth the Franks in the relation they bear to the establishment of the monarchy
Book XXXI: Theory of the feudal laws among the Franks in relation they bear to the revolutions of their monarchy.
v. 39. An inquiry into the nature and causes of the wealth of nations: Book One: Of the causes of improvement in the productive power of labour, and of the order according to which its produce is naturally distributed among the different ranks of the people: Of the division of labour
Of the principle which gives occasion to the division of labour
That the division of labour is limited by the extent of the market
Of the origin and use of money
Of the real and nominal price of commodities, or their price in labour and their price in money
Of the component parts of the price of commodities
Of the natural and market price of commodities
Of the wages of labour
Of the profits of stock
Of wages and profit in the different employments of labour and stock
Of the rent of land
Book Two: Of the nature, accumulation and employment of stock: Of the division of stock
Of money considered as a particular branch of the general stock of the society or of the expense of maintaining the national capital
Of the accumulation of capital, or of productive and unproductive labour
Of stock lent at interest
Of the different employment of capitals
Book Three: Of the different progress of opulence in different nations: Of the natural progress of opulence
Of the discouragement of agriculture in the ancient state of Europe after the fall of the Roman Empire
Of the rise and progress of cities and towns after the fall of the Roman Empire
How the commerce of the towns contributed to the improvement of the country
Book Four: Of systems of political economy: Of the principle of the commercial, or mercantile system
Of restraints upon the importation from foreign countries of such goods as can be produced at home
Of the extraordinary restraints upon the importation of goods of almost all kinds from those countries with which the balance is supposed to be disadvantageous
Of drawbacks
Of bounties
Of treaties of commerce
Of colonies
Conclusion of the mercantile system
Of the agricultural systems, or of those systems of political economy which represent the produce of land as either the sole or the principal source of the revenue and wealth of every country
Book Five: Of the revenue of the sovereign or commonwealth: Of the expenses of the sovereign or commonwealth
Of the sources of the general or public revenue of the society
Of public debts /Adam Smith.
v. 40-41. The decline and fall of the Roman Empire / Edward Gibbon.
v. 42. The critique of pure reason
The critique of practical reason, and other ethical treatises
The critique of judgement / Immanuel Kant.
v. 43. American state papers: Declaration of independence, Articles of confederation and the Constitution
The Federalist / Alexander Hamilton, James Madison [and] John Jay
On liberty, Representative government [and] Utilitarianism / John Stuart Mill.
v. 44. Life of Samuel Johnson, LL. D. / James Boswell.
v. 45. Elements of Chemistry: Of the formation and decomposition of aeriform fluids, of the combustion of simple bodies, and the formation of acids
Of the combination of acids with salifiable bases, and of the formation of neutral salts
Description of the instruments and operations of chemistry / Antoine Laurent Lavoisier
Analytical theory of heat / Jean Baptiste Joseph Fourier
Experimental researches in electricity / Michael Faraday.
v. 46. The philosophy of right / Gerog Hegel.
v. 47. Faust: Dedication
Prelude on the state
Prologue in heaven
First Part: Night, Faust in his study
Outside the gate of the town
Faust's study (1)
Faust's study (2): Mephistopheles and the student
Auerbach's cellar
Witch's kitchen
Faust and Gretchen: Street
Evening
Promenade
Neighbour's house
Street
Garden
Garden house
Forest and cavern
Gretchen's room
Martha's garden
At the well
Ramparts
Night, before Gretchen's door
Cathedral
Walpurgis night
Walpurgis night's dream
Dismal day
Night, an open field
Prison
Second part: Act I: Pleasant landscape
Emperor's palace
Spacious hall, masquerade
Pleasure garden
Dark gallery
Brightly lighted halls
Hall of the knights
Act II: High-vaulted, narrow, gothic chamber
Mephistopheles and the bachelor of arts
Laboratory
Classical Walpurgis night: Pharsalian fields
By the upper peneus
By the lower peneus
By the upper peneus as before
Rocky coves of the Aegean Sea
Act III: Before the Palace of Menelaus in Sparta
Inner court of Faust's castle
Arcadia
Act IV: High mouontain range
On the headland
Rival emperor's tent
Act V: Open country
Palace
Deep night
Midnight
Great outer court of the palace
Burial
Mountain gorges: Heaven / Johann Goethe.
v. 48. Moby Dick : or, The Whale / Herman Melville.
v. 49. The origin of species by means of natural selection. The descent of man and selection in relation to sex / Charles Darwin.
v. 50. Capital / Karl Marx
Manifesto of the Communist Party / Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels : Capital / Karl Marx: Commodities and money: Commodities
Exchange
Money, or the circulation of commodities
Transformation of money into capital: General formula for capital
Contradictions in the general formula of capital
Buying and selling of labour-power
Production of absolute surplus value: Labour process and the process of producing surplus value
Constant capital and variable capital
Rate of surplus value
Working day
Rate and mass of surplus value
Production of relative surplus value: Concept of relative surplus value
Cooperation
Division of labour and manufacture
Machinery and modern industry
Production of absolute and of relative surplus value
Absolute and relative surplus value
Changes of magnitude in the price of labour power and in surplus value
Various formulae for the rate of surplus value
Wages: Transformation of the value (and respectively the price) of labour power into wages
Time-wages
Piece-wages
National differences of wages
Accumulation of capital: Simple reproduction
Conversion of surplus value into capital
General law of capitalist accumulation
So-called primitive accumulation: Secret of primitive accumulation
Expropriation of the agricultural population from the land
Bloody legislation against the expropriated, from the end of the fifteenth century; forcing down of wages by acts of Parliament
Genesis of the capitalist farmer
Reaction of the agricultural revolution on industry; creation of the home market for industrial capital
Genesis of the industrial capitalist
Historical tendency of capitalistic accumulation
Modern theory of colonization
Manifesto of the Communist Party / Karl Marx & Friedrich Engels.
v. 51. War and peace / Leo Tolstoy.
v. 52. Brothers Karamazov: Part I: Book I: History of a family: Fyodor Pavlovitch Karamazov
He gets rid of his eldest son
Second marriage, and the second family
Third son, Alyosha
Elders
Book II: Unfortunate gathering: They arrive at the monastery
Old Buffoon
Peasant women who have faith
Lady of little faith
So be it! So be it!
Why is such a man alive/ Young man bent on a career
Scandalous scene
Book III: Sensualists: In the servants' quarters
Lizaveta
Confession of a passionate heart- in verse
Confession of a passionate heart- in anecdote
Confession of a passionate heart- "Heels up"
Smerdyakov
Controversy
Over the brandy
Sensualists
Both together
Another reputation ruined
Part II: Book IV: Lacerations: Father Ferapont
At his father's
Meeting with the schoolboys
At the Hohlakovs'
Laceration in the drawing-room
Laceration in the cottage
And in the open air
Book V: Pro and contra: Engagement
Smerdyakov with a guitar
Brothers make friends
Rebellion
Grand Inquisitor
For awhile a very obscure one
"It's always worth while speaking to a clever man"
Book VI: Russian monk: Father Zossima and his visitors
Recollection of Father Zossima's youth before he became a monk; duel
Conversations and Exhortations of Father Zossima
Part III: Book VII: Alyosha: Breath of corruption
Critical moment
Onion
Cana of Galilee
Book VIII: Mitya: Kuzma Samsonov
Lyagavy
Gold mines
In the dark
Sudden resolution
"I am coming, too!"
First and rightful lover
Delirium
Book IX: Preliminary investigation: Beginning of Perhotin's official career
Alarm
Sufferings of a soul; first ordeal
Second ordeal
Third ordeal
Prosecutor catches Mitya
Mitya's great secret; received with hisses
Evidence of the witnesses; babe
They carry Mitya away
Part IV: Book X: Boys
Kolya Krassotkin
Children
Schoolboy
Lost dog
By Ilusha's bedside
Precocity
Ilusha
Book XI: Ivan: At Grushenka's
Injured foot
Little demon
Hymn and a secret
Not you, not you!
First interview with Smerdyakov
Second interview with Smerdyakov
Third and last interview with Smerdyakov
Devil; Ivan's nightmare
"It was he who said that"
Book XII: Judicial error: Fatal day
Dangerous witnesses
Medical experts and a pound of nuts
Fortune smiles on Mitya
Sudden catastrophe
Prosecutor's speech; sketches of character
Historical survey
Treatise on Smerdyakov
Galloping Troika; End of the prosecutor's speech
Speech for the defense; an argument that cuts both ways
There was no money; there was no robbery
And there was no murder either
Corrupter of thought
Peasants stand firm
Epilogue: Plans for Mitya's escape
For a moment the lie becomes the truth
Ilusha's funeral; speech at the stone /Fyodor Dostoyevsky.
v. 53. Principles of psychology: Scope of psychology
Functions of the brain
On some general conditions of brain-activity
Habit
Automaton-theory
Mind-stuff theory
Methods and snares of psychology
Relations of minds to other things
Stream of thought
Consciousness of self
Attention
Conception
Discrimination and comparison
Association
Perception of time
Memory
Sensation
Imagination
Perception of "things"
Perception of space
Perception of reality
Reasoning
Production of movement
Instinct
Emotions
Will
Hypnotism
Necessary truths and the effects of experience.
v. 54. Major works / Sigmund Freud.
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9780852291634
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