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On the Fourfold Root of the Principle of Sufficient Reason, and On the Will in Nature: Two Essays (revised edition) cover

On the Fourfold Root of the Principle of Sufficient Reason, and On the Will in Nature: Two Essays (revised edition)

Chapter 71: EDITOR'S PREFACE TO THE FOURTH EDITION.
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About This Book

The first essay offers an analytic account of the principle that every fact requires a sufficient reason, distinguishing four distinct forms of that principle corresponding to different domains of explanation — grounding causation, the conditions of perception and spatial/mathematical relations, logical inference, and practical motivation — and showing how these forms delimit what can be known. The second essay treats natural phenomena as manifestations of a blind, striving will immanent in organisms and physical processes, arguing that teleology appears only as an expression of underlying will and exploring implications for biology, psychology, and the philosophy of nature.

EDITOR'S PREFACE TO THE FOURTH EDITION.

The present Fourth Edition is an identical reprint of the Third: it therefore contains the same Corrections and Additions which I had already inserted in the Third Edition from Schopenhauer's own manuscript.

Julius Frauenstädt.

Berlin, September, 1877.