THE SECRET CODES OF THE MIND: INTRODUCTION TO PHILOSOPHY (Book I ) Paperback

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The Complete Philosophy Textbook — From the Foundations to New Horizons

Philosophy begins with questions that remain central across centuries: What is truth? What is freedom? What can we know, and how should we live? This book presents philosophy as a disciplined and systematic inquiry into these enduring questions, integrating the history of philosophy with conceptual and methodological tools for philosophical analysis.

The Secret Codes of the Mind: Introduction to Philosophy
is the first volume of a six-volume academic textbook series developed over decades of university teaching and research by Dr. Andrew V. Kudin. Spanning more than 540,000 words across six volumes, the series combines clarity, conceptual rigor, and historical breadth. It introduces readers to the foundational philosophical traditions that have shaped intellectual history and continue to influence contemporary thought.

Inside Volume I:

Lecture 1: What is philosophy?
Defines philosophy, explains how it is studied (methods and approaches), and identifies and analyzes its principal branches—metaphysics, epistemology, ethics, aesthetics, logic, and political philosophy.

Lecture 2: Philosophical methods
Examines key methods of philosophical investigation—from the dialectical and analytical methods to phenomenological and existential approaches—and shows how together they form the principal tools of philosophy. These methods are not abstract theories but practical instruments for understanding and transforming the world, illustrated with clear, real-world examples.

Lecture 3: Core categories of thought
Explores the foundational categories—being, causality, truth, unity, diversity, and others—and traces their treatment in the works of Aristotle, Immanuel Kant, Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel, and Charles Sanders Peirce.

Lecture 4: Consciousness, matter, space, and time
Traces the philosophical evolution of these core metaphysical categories—from ancient and medieval cosmologies to Enlightenment rationalism and contemporary debates—and emphasizes how different traditions have interpreted their meaning and significance.

Lecture 5: The concept of freedom
Analyzes the nature and limits of freedom, including free will, determinism, freedom of speech, and personal autonomy. It also examines what it means to act, to choose, and to take responsibility in a world shaped by both necessity and possibility.

Each lecture includes:

  • Discussion questions designed to support critical reflection and classroom dialogue
  • Suggested readings for further study
  • Conceptual and applied exercises linking theory with philosophical practice


Who This Book Is For

  • Professors and instructors: A course-ready textbook for introductory philosophy and general education courses, suitable for lecture-based or seminar-based formats.
  • Students: A rigorous yet accessible introduction to philosophy’s central problems, methods, and concepts, designed to develop analytical thinking and conceptual clarity.
  • Independent readers: A structured and systematic entry into philosophy, offering a coherent path through its foundational questions and traditions.


Supplementary instructional materials may be made available to support teaching and independent study.

  • Publisher: ‎Kudin & Sons Academic Press
  • Publication date: ‎ November 27, 2024
  • Language: ‎ English
  • Print length: ‎ 371 pages
  • Item Weight: ‎ 1.42 pounds
  • Dimensions: ‎ 7 x 0.84 x 10 inches