About the Book
Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 149. Chapters: Existentialism, Idealism, Materialism, Platonic realism, Platonic idealism, Nihilism, Objectivism, Determinism, Anti-realism, Physicalism, Nominalism, Reductionism, Solipsism, Bundle theory, Essentialism, Action theory, Substance theory, Teleology, Monism, Eternalism, Hylomorphism, Simulation hypothesis, Metaphysical naturalism, Theory of Forms, Counterpart theory, Libertarianism, Absurdism, Aristotelianism, Speculative realism, Mechanism, Transcendental idealism, Phenomenalism, Scientific realism, Hylozoism, Absolute idealism, Temporal finitism, Rational mysticism, Philosophical realism, Transcendental perspectivism, Trope, Exemplification theory, Projectivism, Literary nominalism, Pluralism, Pirsig's metaphysics of Quality, Tychism, Theory of everything, Logical atomism, Indeterminism, Actualism, Organicism, Irrealism, Predeterminism, Subjectivism, British idealism, Indefinite monism, Fragmentalism, Voluntarism, Perdurantism, Dysteleology, Conceptualism, Quietism, Objective idealism, Scotistic realism, Metaphysical solipsism, Hindu idealism, Spiritualism, Dynamism, Metaphysical nihilism, Humanistic naturalism, Meliorism, Non-essentialism, Endurantism, Revisionary materialism, Noneism, Accidentalism, Open individualism, Moderate realism, Material monism, Epistemicism, Logical holism, Illusionism, Panlogism, Identityism. Excerpt: Existentialism is a term applied to the work of a number of philosophers since the 19th century who, despite large differences in their positions, generally focused on the condition of human existence, and an individual's emotions, actions, responsibilities, and thoughts, or the meaning or purpose of life. Existential philosophers often focused more on what they believed was subjective, such as beliefs and religion, or human states, feelings, and emotions, such as freedom, pain, guilt, and...