| Preface | p. 9 |
| Humanism in the Information Revolution | p. 13 |
| Secular Humanism Is a Whole Worldview | p. 14 |
| Religious Humanism and Antisocial Freethinking | p. 15 |
| Humanists Face the Information Revolution | p. 17 |
| Information and Knowledge | p. 18 |
| The Information Highway | p. 20 |
| Toward the Virtual Society? | p. 22 |
| Conclusion | p. 24 |
| Ten Cosmological Paradigms | p. 27 |
| Sketch of Ten Paradigms | p. 28 |
| Holism: The Cosmic Animal | p. 29 |
| Hierarchism: The Cosmic Ladder | p. 31 |
| Tychism: The World Casino | p. 31 |
| Dynamicism: The Grand River | p. 32 |
| Dialectics: Universal Conflagration | p. 33 |
| Atomism: The Cosmic Cloud | p. 34 |
| Mechanism: The Cosmic Clock | p. 37 |
| Sacralism: The Cosmic Temple | p. 38 |
| Textualism: The Book of the World | p. 38 |
| Systemism: The System of All Systems | p. 40 |
| Epistemological Consequences | p. 43 |
| Conclusion | p. 47 |
| Materialism Triumphant | p. 49 |
| Matter Inert? | p. 50 |
| Matter Dematerialized? | p. 53 |
| Quanta Unreal? | p. 55 |
| Life Immaterial? | p. 56 |
| Mind Immaterial? | p. 58 |
| Culture Immaterial? | p. 60 |
| Science Is the Study of Matter | p. 64 |
| Materialism and How to Keep It Up to Date | p. 64 |
| Defining "Matter" | p. 67 |
| The Central Postulate of Materialism | p. 69 |
| Material Systems | p. 71 |
| Emergence | p. 72 |
| Levels and Evolution | p. 75 |
| A New Materialism | p. 76 |
| Conclusion | p. 77 |
| From Neuron to Mind | p. 79 |
| Five Approaches to the Study of Humans | p. 81 |
| Seven Models of Man | p. 83 |
| Systems and Levels | p. 86 |
| Seeking to Explain Behavior and Mentation | p. 89 |
| Two Syntheses | p. 93 |
| Conclusion | p. 97 |
| Two Trilemmas about Social Matter | p. 99 |
| Micro-macro Links | p. 100 |
| Social Dynamics | p. 103 |
| Definitions | p. 106 |
| Principles about Social Systems | p. 109 |
| Principles about the Study of Social Systems | p. 112 |
| Conclusion | p. 116 |
| Interpretation and Hypothesis in Social Studies | p. 117 |
| Meaning, Goal, Function, or Indicator? | p. 118 |
| Interpretation, Inference, or Hypothesis? | p. 122 |
| Why Social-Science Problems Seem Intractable | p. 128 |
| Basic Similarity between Verstehen and Rational-Choice Theory | p. 131 |
| Conclusion | p. 134 |
| Doubts about Skepticism | p. 139 |
| Dogmatism and Skepticism Come in Degrees | p. 141 |
| Is Anything Possible? | p. 146 |
| All Conjectures Are Not Equally Plausible | p. 148 |
| Likelihood and Plausibility: Different though Related | p. 149 |
| Negativism | p. 152 |
| The Skeptic's Paradox | p. 154 |
| Radical Skepticism Is Timid and Paralyzing | p. 155 |
| Conclusion | p. 158 |
| Diagnosing Pseudoscience | p. 161 |
| Faking Science | p. 161 |
| Importance of the Problem | p. 163 |
| Cognitive Fields | p. 167 |
| Science and Pseudoscience | p. 170 |
| A Closer Look at Pseudoscience and Pseudotechnology | p. 173 |
| Parapsychology: Chasing Ghosts | p. 176 |
| Psychoanalysis: Wild Fantasies | p. 179 |
| Computerist Psychology: Confusing Brains with Machines | p. 182 |
| Distinguishing Pseudoscience from Protoscience and Heterodoxy | p. 184 |
| Conclusion | p. 189 |
| Values and Morals in a Materialist and Realist Perspective | p. 191 |
| Fact and Value | p. 192 |
| Law and Rule | p. 194 |
| Right and Duty | p. 197 |
| Agathonism: A Humanist Ethics | p. 200 |
| Technoholodemocracy: A Humanist Social Philosophy | p. 201 |
| Conclusion | p. 203 |
| Crisis and Reconstruction in Philosophy | p. 207 |
| The Crisis | p. 208 |
| Causes of the Crisis | p. 215 |
| Options and Desiderata for Reconstruction | p. 220 |
| Conclusion | p. 224 |
| Note on the Sources | p. 227 |
| References | p. 229 |
| Index of Names | p. 237 |
| Index of Subjects | p. 241 |
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