THE SECRET CODES OF THE MIND: FROM MEDIEVAL PHILOSOPHY TO THE AGE OF ENLIGHTENMENT (Book IV) Hardcover
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Volume IV: Medieval Philosophy and Enlightenment Ideas — From Faith to Reason
This volume of The Secret Codes of the Mind: Introduction to Philosophy traces how medieval philosophy evolved into Enlightenment ideas, showing how faith and reason together reshaped knowledge, ethics, politics, and science. It covers Christian Scholasticism, Islamic philosophy and Sufism, Jewish philosophy and Kabbalah, the rise of the scientific method, the debate between Rationalism and Empiricism, and the philosophy of Freemasonry, revealing the intellectual forces that built the modern world. From the cloisters of medieval monasteries to the salons of Enlightenment Paris, you’ll follow a clear path through thinkers, texts, and debates that still matter today.
Module V. Medieval Philosophy — Christian, Islamic, and Jewish Traditions
- Lecture 19: Saint Augustine and Early Christian Philosophy — The turn from pagan heritage to a Christian worldview through the influential ideas of Saint Augustine.
- Lecture 20: Christian Scholasticism and Thomas Aquinas — The durable synthesis of Aristotelian logic and Christian theology, shaping centuries of debate on morality, metaphysics, and natural law.
- Lecture 21: Islamic Philosophy and Sufism — Key contributions of Ibn Arabi and Al‑Ghazali, blending philosophy and mysticism and influencing both Islamic and Western traditions.
- Lecture 22: Jewish Philosophy and Kabbalah — From Philo of Alexandria and Maimonides to Baruch Spinoza; explores the Kabbalistic Tree of Life (Etz ha-Sefirot) and the concept of Tikkun Olam.
Module VI. Philosophy of the Modern Era — Rationalism, Empiricism, and the Scientific Method
- Lecture 23: René Descartes — Meditations on First Philosophy, Discourse on Method, and the foundations of modern rationalism.
- Lecture 24: Francis Bacon, Thomas Hobbes, and John Locke — Explores Bacon’s scientific method, Hobbes’s social contract theory, and Locke’s tabula rasa epistemology.
- Lecture 25: Rationalism and Empiricism Compared — Examines Leibniz’s Monadology and Pascal’s philosophy of probability, and provides a comparative analysis of Rationalism and Empiricism.
- Lecture 26: David Hume and Adam Smith — Hume’s skepticism and Smith’s integration of economic and philosophical ideas, shaping modern ethics and market theory.
Module VII. Age of Enlightenment — Political Philosophy and Freemasonry
- Lecture 27: Enlightenment Thinkers — Voltaire, Rousseau, Montesquieu, Diderot, and Grigory Skovoroda, redefining epistemology, metaphysics, and political thought.
- Lecture 28: Philosophy of Freemasonry — Explores the ethical principles and symbolic language of Freemasonry, and examines its role in shaping social and political thought in Europe and the United States during the Enlightenment.
➤Special Features of the Textbook
- Broad Intellectual Scope — Connects medieval faith‑based systems with the rise of reason and modern science.
- Interactive Learning — Thought‑provoking questions, assignments, and curated readings after each lecture.
- Accessible Analysis — Clear explanations of complex theories for academic study and personal enrichment.
Why This Volume Matters
Explore how Christian, Islamic, and Jewish thinkers shaped medieval thought; how the scientific method and the contest between Rationalism and Empiricism forged modern inquiry; and how Enlightenment ideals and Masonic philosophy influenced politics, ethics, and society.
Begin your study of medieval philosophy and Enlightenment ideas — and feel the impact of an intellectual revolution that still shapes every aspect of life today.
- Publisher : Kudin & Sons Academic Press
- Publication date : February 1, 2025
- Language : English
- Print length : 494 pages
- Item Weight : 1.88 pounds
- Dimensions : 7 x 1.12 x 10 inches
