Janus

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by Arthur Koestler


  Wallas, Graham, ida

  Walter, W. Gray, 251

  Wars, origin of, 14-15, 19

  Watson,J. B., 25, 165-8, 196

  Weaver, Warren, 266

  Weeping, 137, 137 n, 138-9

  Weismann, August, 196-7, 200-3, 213

  Weiss, P. A., 23 n, 30, 290, 299, 308

  Welles, Orson, 324

  Wells, H. G., 281

  Welträtsel, Die (The Riddles of the Universe), 279

  What is Life?, 268-9

  Wheeler, J. A., 254, 254 n, 255

  Whitehead, A. North, 159

  Wholeness, 26-7, 33, 58, 60-2, 66-7, 74, 78, 82

  Whyte, L. L., 188 n, 210 n, 224 n, 270

  Wickranashinghe, Chandra, 283

  Wiener Walzer, 127

  Wilberforce, Samuel, bishop of Oxford, 179

  Wilson, D., 37 n

  Wit, Ch. VI passim, 135

  Witticisms, 120-1, 133

  Wolsky, A., 174 n

  Wolsky, M. de I., 174 n

  Woltereck, N., 224 n, 269

  Wood Jones, F., 12

  Woodger,J., 32, 293 n

  Woodworth, R. S., 150, 312, 314

  Yale University, 83-5, 125, 256, 279

  Yeats, W. B., 143, 145

  Yoga, 46, 55, 234

  Young, J. Z., 217

  ABOUT THE AUTHOR

  ARTHUR KOESTLER was born in 1905 in Budapest. Though he studied science

  and psychology in Vienna, at the age of twenty he became a foreign

  correspondent and worked for various European newspapers in the Middle

  East, Paris, Berlin, Russia and Spain. During the Spanish Civil War, which

  he covered from the Republican side, he was captured and imprisoned for

  several months by the Nationalists, but was exchanged after international

  protest. In 1939-40 he was interned in a French detention camp. After

  his release, due to British government intervention, he joined the

  French Foreign Legion, subsequently' escaped to England, and joined the

  British Army.

  Like many other intellectuals in the thirties, Koestler saw in the Soviet

  experiment the only hope and alternative to fascism. He became a member

  of the Communist Party in 1931, but left it in disillusionment during the

  Moscow purges in 1938. His earlier books were mainly concerned with these

  experiences, either in autobiographical form or in essays or political

  novels. Among the latter, Darkness At Noon has been translated into

  thirty-three languages.

  After World War II, Mr. Koestler became a British citizen, and all his

  books since 1940 have been written in English. He now lives in London,

  but he frequently lectures at American universities, and was a Fellow

  at the Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences at Stanford

  in 1964-65.

  In 1968 Mr. Koestler received the Sonning Prize at the University of

  Copenhagen for his contributions to European culture. He is also a

  Commander of the Order of the British Empire, as well as one of the ten

  Companions of Literature, elected by the Royal Society of Literature. His

  works are now being republished in a collected edition of twenty volumes.

  PHILOSOPHY, HISTORY OF SCIENCE

  Arthur

  Koestler

  --------

  JANUS

  "Few can surpass the clarity and simplicity with which Koestler

  can translate complex scientific ideas into common language:

  The Washington Post Book World

  --------------------------------------------------------------------------

  This important work is at once a summary and an extension of Arthur

  Koestler's lifelong examination of the "sciences of life -- the evolution,

  creativity and pathology of the human mind." Its central theme is the

  position of man in the post-Hiroshima world, a time when such traditional

  doctrines as rationalism, materialism, and determinism offer little

  hope for our continued survival. This encyclopedic study ranges from

  small-particle physics to humor, and the analysis is both informed and

  highly suggestive. As Koestler questions our understanding of life,

  he also contributes to it -- in this book with a new and compelling

  model of the human mind, based on the rival tendencies of independence

  and cooperation.

  --------------------------------------------------------------------------

  "In this eloquent distillation of his ideas ... koestler demonstrates the

  breadth of vision that makes him one of the most challenging

  thinkers of our time."

  Bookviews

  Table of Contents

  Author's Note

  Prologue

  PART ONE

  I The Holarchy

  II Beyond Eros and Thanatos

  III The Three Dimensions of Emotion

  IV Ad Majorem Gloriam ...

  V An Alternative to Despair

  PART TWO

  VI Humour and Wit

  VII The Art of Discovery

  VIII The Discoveries of Art

  PART THREE

  IX Crumbling Citadels

  X Lamarck Revisited

  XI Strategies and Purpose in Evolution

  PART FOUR

  XII Free Will in a Hierarchic Context

  XIII Physics and Metaphysics

  XIV A Glance through the Keyhole

  APPENDICES

  Appendix I

  Appendix II

  Appendix III

  Appendix IV

  References

  Bibliography

  Index

  section 12

  later

  Russell's anecdote

  p. 110

  Ch. VIII, 9

  Ch. I, 9

  Ch. I, 13

  Chapter I, 10

  Ch. IX, 7

  Chapter VII, 2

  Chapter II, 4

  Chapter I, 6

  pp. 200 ff

  p. 140

  p. 282a

 

 

 


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