Man the Indivisible
. Foreword
1. A Psychological Approach Towards a Philosophical Problem
2. The "Outward Shell" Which Should Not Be Despised
3. "I Am Afraid Because I Tremble"
4. A Philosopher Steps Down to Curious Facts of Everyday Wisdom
5. Psycho-physical Relations in the Light of Modern Philosophy
6. Religion's Greatest Principle of Outward Action: Does It "Turn Into" Something Inward?
7. The Receptacles of Life
8. A Worthwhile Alternative: Totality
9. The Mysterious Paths of Human Consciousness
10. Religious Origins of Radical Dualism
11. Dualism in Greek Philosophy
12. Idealism Versus Materialism, Viewed from Our Special Angle
13. A Curious Question: Was Plato's Idealism Fundamentally Greek?
14. Schiller's Remarkable Testimony
15. "Anmut und Wurde"
16. Original Greece and Her Philosophy
17. Plato: How Far Is His Philosophy Unfavourable to Totality?
18. The Genius of Platonism
19. Plato's Anthropology
20. Aristotle and Totality
21. The Individual
22. The Role of Moderation
23. Theory Versus Practice, Seen with the Eyes of the More Genuine Theorist
24. Simplicity and Wholeness Threatened Once More
25. What the Individual Means in Human Life
26. Symbols and General Concepts
27. Is There an 'Epistemological Duality' Even in the Child's Mind?
28. A Remarkable Attitude Towards the Individual in Medieval Thought
29. Radiant Glimpses of Alterocentric Personalism in the Middle Ages
30. Thomas's Remarkable Attitude Towards a Forceful Myth
31. Human Totality Demands a Meaning in Life
32. Conflicting Trends in Medieval Philosophy
33. The Heralds of Modern Science
34. Anthropological Views in the Renaissance
35. Descartes and His Followers in the Hard Paths of Modern Thought
36. The Accentuated Modern Dualism of the Outward Versus the Inward
37. The Union Between Soul and Body More Mysterious Than Ever
38. Man, the Indivisible
39. Psycho-somatic Interactions
40. Connectedness