VIII[THE FACTORS OF LIFE]137
IX[THE IDEA OF FREEDOM]146
X[MONISM AND THE PHILOSOPHY OF SPIRITUAL ACTIVITY]178
XI[WORLD-PURPOSE AND LIFE-PURPOSE (THE DESTINY OF MAN)]190
XII[MORAL IMAGINATION (DARWIN AND MORALITY)]198
XIII[THE VALUE OF LIFE (OPTIMISM AND PESSIMISM)]213
XIV[THE INDIVIDUAL AND THE GENUS]250

[ULTIMATE QUESTIONS]

XV[THE CONSEQUENCES OF MONISM]259

[TRUTH AND SCIENCE]

I[PRELIMINARYOBSERVATIONS]277
II[THE FUNDAMENTAL PROBLEM OF KANT’S THEORY OFKNOWLEDGE]280
III[THEORY OF KNOWLEDGE SINCE KANT]291
IV[THE STARTING-POINTS OF THE THEORY OF KNOWLEDGE]304
V[KNOWLEDGE AND REALITY]319
VI[THEORY OF KNOWLEDGE WITHOUT PRESUPPOSITIONS VERSUSFICHTE’S THEORY OF SCIENCE]329
VII[CONCLUDING REMARKS: EPISTEMOLOGICAL]347
VIII[CONCLUDING REMARKS: PRACTICAL]351

[APPENDICES]

I[ADDITION TO REVISED EDITION OF “THE PHILOSOPHY OFFREEDOM” 1918]357
II[REVISED INTRODUCTION TO “THE PHILOSOPHY OFFREEDOM”]368
III[PREFACE TO ORIGINAL EDITION OF “TRUTH ANDSCIENCE”]374
IV[INTRODUCTION TO ORIGINAL EDITION OF “TRUTH ANDSCIENCE”]381

PREFACE TO THE REVISED EDITION (1918)

There are two fundamental problems in the life of the human mind, to one or other of which everything belongs that is to be discussed in this book. One of these problems concerns the possibility of attaining to such a view of the essential nature of man as will serve as a support for whatever else comes into his life by way of experience or of science, and yet is subject to the suspicion of having no support in itself and of being liable to be driven, by doubt and criticism, into the limbo of uncertainties. The other problem is this: Is man, as voluntary agent, entitled to attribute freedom to himself, or is freedom a mere illusion begotten of his inability to recognise the threads of necessity on which his volition, like any natural event, depends? It is no artificial tissue of theories which provokes this question. In a certain mood it presents itself quite naturally to the human mind. And it is easy to feel that a mind lacks something of its full stature which has never once confronted with the utmost seriousness of inquiry the two possibilities—freedom or necessity. This book is intended to show that the spiritual experiences which the second problem causes man to undergo, depend upon the position he is able to take up towards the first problem. An attempt will be made to prove that there is a view concerning the essential nature of man which can support the rest of knowledge; and, further, an attempt to point out how with this view we gain a complete justification for the idea of free will, provided only that we have first discovered that region of the mind in which free volition can unfold itself.