[spacer ] Publications & Services> Books> Book Series> The World as Active Power: Studies in the History of European Reason The World as Active Power: Studies in the History of European Reason Edited by Juhani Pietarinen and Valtteri Viljanen -- Introduction, Juhani Pietarinen and Valtteri Viljanen 1. Platoâs Power Dualism, Juhani Pietarinen 2. The Active Principle in Stoic Philosophy, HÃ¥vard Løkke 3. Plotinus on Act and Power, Eyjólfur Kjalar Emilsson 4. Power and Activity in Early Medieval Thought, Tomas Ekenberg 5. Power and Possibility in Thomas Aquinas, Andreas Schmid 6. Causal Power in Descartesâs Mind-Body Union, Juhani Pietarinen 7. De novo creat: Descartes on Action, Interaction, and Continuous Creation, Timo Kajamies 8. Motion and Reason: Hobbesâs Difficulties with the Idea of Active Power, Juhani Pietarinen 9. Spinozaâs Actualist Model of Power, Valtteri Viljanen 10. Leibniz on Force, Activity, and Passivity, Arto Repo and Valtteri Viljanen -- Juhani Pietarinen, Ph.D. (1972) in Philosophy, University of Helsinki, is Professor Emeritus of Practical Philosophy at the University of Turku. He is the coeditor of Perspectives on Human Conduct (1988), Genes and Morality (1999) and Philosophy and Biodiversity (2004), and the author of various articles on ethics and history of philosophy. Valtteri Viljanen, Ph.D. (2007) in Philosophy, University of Turku, is Academy of Finland Postdoctoral Fellow at the University of Turku. He is the author of Spinoza's Dynamics of Being: The Concept of Power and its Role in Spinoza's Metaphysics (2007) and of various articles on history of philosophy, especially on Spinoza. What is the ultimate explanatory factor for the existence of the world, for all its changing phenomena and the enduring order found in it? In the history of Western thought, we can find a longstanding philosophical tendency to answer this question in terms of power: the universe is understood as an ordered whole produced by a rational power, that is, by the power of reason. That power is thought to be active in the sense of being capable of existing and acting âin itselfâ as an infinite, eternal, and unchangeable cause of the world. The essays in this collection discuss the idea of active power in the world-explanations of Plato, the Stoics, Neoplatonism, early and late medieval scholasticism, Descartes, Hobbes, Spinoza, Leibniz, Kant, Hegel, and Schopenhauer. [icon_print ] Print Version -- [close ] Tell a friend/Recommend to your library. "The World as Active Power: Studies in the History of European Reason" Your email: ____________________