Lecture Notes
... b) H thinks that determinate and logical concepts ((i) and (ii) above) are different with respect to their potential completeness and finality: i. logical concepts can be (and at least arguably are [though vide the incompleteness of H’s magisterial tour de force discussion of the forms of inference ...
... b) H thinks that determinate and logical concepts ((i) and (ii) above) are different with respect to their potential completeness and finality: i. logical concepts can be (and at least arguably are [though vide the incompleteness of H’s magisterial tour de force discussion of the forms of inference ...
George Herbert Mead Final
... influential theory of imitation-suggestion, in which selves arise mimetically in their relationships to other selves, and cannot be reached other than through their relational contexts (Leys, 1993). Although Mead’s own theory development pursued this notion of selves as fundamentally social, he emph ...
... influential theory of imitation-suggestion, in which selves arise mimetically in their relationships to other selves, and cannot be reached other than through their relational contexts (Leys, 1993). Although Mead’s own theory development pursued this notion of selves as fundamentally social, he emph ...
1 Making Sense of Nietzsche`s “Truths”: Slavery, Misogyny and
... slavery to a set of values. This does not even necessarily involve the “mind-control” or brainwashing of one group of people by another. Each person that blindly accepted the values handed down to them, perhaps through religion or the state, would be enslaved by their own inability to create new val ...
... slavery to a set of values. This does not even necessarily involve the “mind-control” or brainwashing of one group of people by another. Each person that blindly accepted the values handed down to them, perhaps through religion or the state, would be enslaved by their own inability to create new val ...
GEORGE HERBERT MEAD AS AN EMPIRICALLY RESPONSIBLE
... creatures doing things, in other words, performing ‘acts.’ On another occasion of his social psychology lectures, Mead is reported to have said laconically that “wherever we find living forms, we find acts” (ISS: 108). Problems of interpretation are not yet over and done with, however. Mead namely u ...
... creatures doing things, in other words, performing ‘acts.’ On another occasion of his social psychology lectures, Mead is reported to have said laconically that “wherever we find living forms, we find acts” (ISS: 108). Problems of interpretation are not yet over and done with, however. Mead namely u ...
Ethical Encounter - sikkim university library
... the users of those words. (Or perhaps a combination of these.) But what other possibilities are there, it may be asked? One answer would be: that the use of those terms registers a certain meaning in (or of) what was done. Then what is at issue in that way of speaking is neither simply object-relate ...
... the users of those words. (Or perhaps a combination of these.) But what other possibilities are there, it may be asked? One answer would be: that the use of those terms registers a certain meaning in (or of) what was done. Then what is at issue in that way of speaking is neither simply object-relate ...
Phenomenology of Eros.indd
... altogether, or to talk at such an abstract distance from it that the problem of particular experience does not occur. We could then find ourselves on the level of the transcendental ego or of a neutral Dasein, not yet belonging to either sex, who, as Levinas teasingly says, is never hungry. This ter ...
... altogether, or to talk at such an abstract distance from it that the problem of particular experience does not occur. We could then find ourselves on the level of the transcendental ego or of a neutral Dasein, not yet belonging to either sex, who, as Levinas teasingly says, is never hungry. This ter ...
Nietzschean Ethics: One`s Duty to Overcome
... theoretical nihilism. According to Hussain, “Nietzsche claims that nothing has value in itself and therefore all claims of the form ‘X is valuable’ are false.” 20 Therefore, even a subjective claim of the form ‘X is valuable’ would contradict Hussain’s interpretation. Of course, this is a huge assum ...
... theoretical nihilism. According to Hussain, “Nietzsche claims that nothing has value in itself and therefore all claims of the form ‘X is valuable’ are false.” 20 Therefore, even a subjective claim of the form ‘X is valuable’ would contradict Hussain’s interpretation. Of course, this is a huge assum ...
The Missing Formal Proof of Humanity`s Radical Evil in Kant`s
... held responsible only for things that we freely choose, and if we freely choose something, we must have been free not to choose it. So Kant seems to be claiming that we necessarily freely choose one way rather than another, whereas freedom and necessity surely exclude one another. Richard Bernstein ...
... held responsible only for things that we freely choose, and if we freely choose something, we must have been free not to choose it. So Kant seems to be claiming that we necessarily freely choose one way rather than another, whereas freedom and necessity surely exclude one another. Richard Bernstein ...
What Does the Scientist of Man Observe?
... coherence to various specific ideas; for example, to the idea of there being something in an object that is just like what I think of when I think of necessary connection. But I do not think Hume ever denies sense or coherence to scepticism about something, least of all because it undercuts or is so ...
... coherence to various specific ideas; for example, to the idea of there being something in an object that is just like what I think of when I think of necessary connection. But I do not think Hume ever denies sense or coherence to scepticism about something, least of all because it undercuts or is so ...
Present, Past, and Future
... Nonetheless, given that the individual interprets the situation with an awareness of social expectations, Mead (1932: 47) observed that the ‘social nature of the present arises out of its emergence.’ Mead’s (1932) lectures on the subject of time are entitled The Philosophy of the Present, and the fi ...
... Nonetheless, given that the individual interprets the situation with an awareness of social expectations, Mead (1932: 47) observed that the ‘social nature of the present arises out of its emergence.’ Mead’s (1932) lectures on the subject of time are entitled The Philosophy of the Present, and the fi ...
Dao, Harmony and Personhood: Towards a Confucian Ethics of
... It should be pointed out that the normative role of Heaven in Confucian thought is not merely negative but also positive and proactive, and that the worldview powered by Heaven is not deterministic. For Confucians, Heaven does not only sanction and rectify the wrongdoings; it also nourishes things. ...
... It should be pointed out that the normative role of Heaven in Confucian thought is not merely negative but also positive and proactive, and that the worldview powered by Heaven is not deterministic. For Confucians, Heaven does not only sanction and rectify the wrongdoings; it also nourishes things. ...
The Role Of Genus And Difference In
... reasoning it might bring, would fail to be an adequate tool for doing science, at least to Avicenna’s mind. If logic is to play a role in the scientific enterprise, as Avicenna believes that it does, then there must be some bridge, or common element, linking the universal predicables treated in logi ...
... reasoning it might bring, would fail to be an adequate tool for doing science, at least to Avicenna’s mind. If logic is to play a role in the scientific enterprise, as Avicenna believes that it does, then there must be some bridge, or common element, linking the universal predicables treated in logi ...
predication theory: classical vs modern
... predicates Not everybody among the pre- Fregean logicians has been interested in the new higher predicates; the latter are not, after all, the predicates with which "as a rule arguments and inquiries are concerned" (cf. the end of Aristotle's text quoted in section 2). The most distinguished member ...
... predicates Not everybody among the pre- Fregean logicians has been interested in the new higher predicates; the latter are not, after all, the predicates with which "as a rule arguments and inquiries are concerned" (cf. the end of Aristotle's text quoted in section 2). The most distinguished member ...
The4 - Homestead
... of the immanent, or vice versa? Some people would regard, for example, Plato's sense of the numinous or God as being purely transcendent.viii For all that an element of the immanent however does appear to surface in the attempt to conceptually understand the forms as participating in some way in tho ...
... of the immanent, or vice versa? Some people would regard, for example, Plato's sense of the numinous or God as being purely transcendent.viii For all that an element of the immanent however does appear to surface in the attempt to conceptually understand the forms as participating in some way in tho ...
HOBBES AND THE WOLF MAN: MELANCHOLY AND ANIMALITY
... man than in an oyster […] hath not the reason or understanding of a man in him.”20 Hobbes’s contemporaries saw in his work an animalization of man that was, to them, provocative. Why is it so no longer provocative to us? I will suggest that the threshold between humanity and animality should continu ...
... man than in an oyster […] hath not the reason or understanding of a man in him.”20 Hobbes’s contemporaries saw in his work an animalization of man that was, to them, provocative. Why is it so no longer provocative to us? I will suggest that the threshold between humanity and animality should continu ...
Spirituality and Biblical Hermeneutics The Challenge of Ricoeur`s
... education, in which he talks about his protestant grandparents (who raised him), the practice of bible reading and prayer, and an environment that shaped his thinking between two poles: the bible and critical thinking3. This formulation of a thinking between two poles shows that, for Ricoeur, there ...
... education, in which he talks about his protestant grandparents (who raised him), the practice of bible reading and prayer, and an environment that shaped his thinking between two poles: the bible and critical thinking3. This formulation of a thinking between two poles shows that, for Ricoeur, there ...
Existentialism – A Definition
... http://www.allaboutphilosophy.org/existentialism.htm Existentialism in the broader sense is a 20th century philosophy that is centered upon the analysis of existence and of the way humans find themselves existing in the world. The notion is that humans exist first and then each individual spends a l ...
... http://www.allaboutphilosophy.org/existentialism.htm Existentialism in the broader sense is a 20th century philosophy that is centered upon the analysis of existence and of the way humans find themselves existing in the world. The notion is that humans exist first and then each individual spends a l ...
Alexander of Aphrodisias`s Account of Universals and
... one particular, then it does not follow that its form does not exist, because the form can be shared by many things. However, this interpretation seems to entail another difficulty, for it does not make it necessary for universals to be instantiated in order to exist. If one holds that a universal i ...
... one particular, then it does not follow that its form does not exist, because the form can be shared by many things. However, this interpretation seems to entail another difficulty, for it does not make it necessary for universals to be instantiated in order to exist. If one holds that a universal i ...
Mitrovic - Unitec Research Bank
... beliefs (knowledge) that the author attributes to the reader, contribute to the content as well. The total sum of the propositions that a historical narrative expresses also includes the propositions that are implied by the style and the rhetoric the historian uses—for instance, the author may use i ...
... beliefs (knowledge) that the author attributes to the reader, contribute to the content as well. The total sum of the propositions that a historical narrative expresses also includes the propositions that are implied by the style and the rhetoric the historian uses—for instance, the author may use i ...
Theoretical Reason and Practical Reason for Kant and Tabataba`i
... demonstrate that how much both thinkers have agreement and disagreement about definition, method and limits of understanding, and how these two reason are functioning. We can find a deeper perception of this controversial issue through explanation of these agreements and disagreements. Theoretical a ...
... demonstrate that how much both thinkers have agreement and disagreement about definition, method and limits of understanding, and how these two reason are functioning. We can find a deeper perception of this controversial issue through explanation of these agreements and disagreements. Theoretical a ...
To be submitted to Vincent Hendricks` Synthese
... not be H2O’ without treating the latter as a counterpossible.7 For, the closest world where the sense of ‘water is XYZ’ is true is a possible world. At that world, the sense of ‘water is not H2O’ is true. So, the counterfactual comes out true but not vacuously true. But this strategy, however brill ...
... not be H2O’ without treating the latter as a counterpossible.7 For, the closest world where the sense of ‘water is XYZ’ is true is a possible world. At that world, the sense of ‘water is not H2O’ is true. So, the counterfactual comes out true but not vacuously true. But this strategy, however brill ...
Cosmopolitanism, Stoicism, and Liberalism
... authority of nature itself. For Didymus, humans, while not given the creative faculty of forming the content of natural law, are still beholden to understand and obey it because of their rationality - this, in the same way that non-citizen members of a polis are required to obey the law of that poli ...
... authority of nature itself. For Didymus, humans, while not given the creative faculty of forming the content of natural law, are still beholden to understand and obey it because of their rationality - this, in the same way that non-citizen members of a polis are required to obey the law of that poli ...
HERE - BasicIncome.com
... spoken of as psychologically unreliable; and generally there is a vague association between wreathing laurels in your hair and sticking straws in it. Facts and history utterly contradict this view. Most of the very great poets have been not only sane, but extremely business-like; and if Shakespeare ...
... spoken of as psychologically unreliable; and generally there is a vague association between wreathing laurels in your hair and sticking straws in it. Facts and history utterly contradict this view. Most of the very great poets have been not only sane, but extremely business-like; and if Shakespeare ...
Two Conceptions of Human Dignity
... theologians. It is also officially proclaimed to be the basis of human rights in the preamble to the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and in the preambles of the two main international covenants on human rights.2 The idea goes back a long way but we owe the modern conception of human dignity an ...
... theologians. It is also officially proclaimed to be the basis of human rights in the preamble to the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and in the preambles of the two main international covenants on human rights.2 The idea goes back a long way but we owe the modern conception of human dignity an ...
Mimesis, Eros, and Mania
... images in Hegel, and especially his Phenomenology, in Hegel’s Recollection: A Study of Images in the Phenomenology of Spirit (Albany: State University of New York Press, 1985). Verene offers us a more winged Hegel, but this is a “Hegel” to whom, as I will show later, Hegel himself came to play false ...
... images in Hegel, and especially his Phenomenology, in Hegel’s Recollection: A Study of Images in the Phenomenology of Spirit (Albany: State University of New York Press, 1985). Verene offers us a more winged Hegel, but this is a “Hegel” to whom, as I will show later, Hegel himself came to play false ...
Zaid Orudzhev
Zaid Melikovich Orudzhev (Russian: Заи́д Ме́ликович Ору́джев; born on April 4, 1932) is an Azerbaijani-born Russian academic specialising in the history of philosophy, dialectical logic and sociological methodology. He is a doctor of philosophy and currently a professor at the Moscow State Academy for Business Administration.