
View - OhioLINK Electronic Theses and Dissertations Center
... in common with its traditional meaning. Instead, Nietzsche asserts that “freedom” is unmediated action which is expressed naturally and involuntarily from one’s underlying inherited traits. For the higher types, such “freedom” is expressed in acts of strength, ...
... in common with its traditional meaning. Instead, Nietzsche asserts that “freedom” is unmediated action which is expressed naturally and involuntarily from one’s underlying inherited traits. For the higher types, such “freedom” is expressed in acts of strength, ...
Tekstiä esitelmän 1
... The main question is how Ricœur‘s interpretation theory uses other fields of philosophy to understand human action and being. Both existential and social questions of the self are approached in Ricœur‘s view from the methodological point of view. Ricœur translates the ideas of the continental tradi ...
... The main question is how Ricœur‘s interpretation theory uses other fields of philosophy to understand human action and being. Both existential and social questions of the self are approached in Ricœur‘s view from the methodological point of view. Ricœur translates the ideas of the continental tradi ...
THE PHILOSOPHIES OF HISTORY OF HERDER AND
... the Christ Himself had in mind (“render therefore unto Caesar the things which be Caesar’s, and unto God the things which be God’s” [Luke, 20:25]), but represents the natural evolution of ideas that were first revealed long ago, that have taken on many forms across history, and that invariably will ...
... the Christ Himself had in mind (“render therefore unto Caesar the things which be Caesar’s, and unto God the things which be God’s” [Luke, 20:25]), but represents the natural evolution of ideas that were first revealed long ago, that have taken on many forms across history, and that invariably will ...
Walker Percy and the Magic of Naming
... of understanding the traditional Judeo-Christian teaching that the “something more” is a soul somehow locked in the organism like a ghost in a machine. What is he then? He has not the faintest idea…. When man doesn’t know whether he is an organism or a soul or both, and if both how he can be both, i ...
... of understanding the traditional Judeo-Christian teaching that the “something more” is a soul somehow locked in the organism like a ghost in a machine. What is he then? He has not the faintest idea…. When man doesn’t know whether he is an organism or a soul or both, and if both how he can be both, i ...
Nietzsche`s Conception of Friendship
... personality and feelings throughout his philosophy, reminding his readers that philosophy is not simply books, ideas and abstractions. Rather philosophy should pervade the daily routines, the most casual interactions and all things that could be too plain for many other philosophers. Nietzsche is a ...
... personality and feelings throughout his philosophy, reminding his readers that philosophy is not simply books, ideas and abstractions. Rather philosophy should pervade the daily routines, the most casual interactions and all things that could be too plain for many other philosophers. Nietzsche is a ...
Durham e-Theses - Durham University
... chapter also introduces the reader, albeit briefly, to Wittgenstein, and his views on the role of language. The final chapter, introduces the rather capricious world of Zen and Zen art, compared to Nietzsche's use of art as a metaphor, and example for his tJbermensch ideal. This somewhat strange mar ...
... chapter also introduces the reader, albeit briefly, to Wittgenstein, and his views on the role of language. The final chapter, introduces the rather capricious world of Zen and Zen art, compared to Nietzsche's use of art as a metaphor, and example for his tJbermensch ideal. This somewhat strange mar ...
Schopenhauer`s Theory of Justice
... reasons he was named Arthur was that his mother favored the name because it was spelled the same in German, French, and English. By the time he was a teenager Arthur had already developed a fluency in all three languages.19 Until his college years, Arthur's education was anything but conventional. H ...
... reasons he was named Arthur was that his mother favored the name because it was spelled the same in German, French, and English. By the time he was a teenager Arthur had already developed a fluency in all three languages.19 Until his college years, Arthur's education was anything but conventional. H ...
Hegel, Nietzsche and the Beyond Within Life by Michael Harry
... transcendent beyond has in fact been made present and not merely destroyed by its progressive appearance as history, ...
... transcendent beyond has in fact been made present and not merely destroyed by its progressive appearance as history, ...
DAMIAN ILODIGWE OAKESHOTT`S CRITIQUE OF SOVEREIGNTY
... mind on all occasion, for thought free, from obligation to any authority save authority of reason. His circumstances in the modern world have made him contentious: he is the enemy of authority, of prejudice, of the merely traditional, customary or habitual. His mental attitude is at once skeptical a ...
... mind on all occasion, for thought free, from obligation to any authority save authority of reason. His circumstances in the modern world have made him contentious: he is the enemy of authority, of prejudice, of the merely traditional, customary or habitual. His mental attitude is at once skeptical a ...
Kant`s Schematism and the Foundations of Mathematics
... In contemporary philosophy of science there is a renewed interest in Kant’s theory of knowledge and his philosophy of science. One of the reasons for this is the comprehensive work done by Michael Friedman which has prompted a variety of responses. The present thesis can also been seen as a reaction ...
... In contemporary philosophy of science there is a renewed interest in Kant’s theory of knowledge and his philosophy of science. One of the reasons for this is the comprehensive work done by Michael Friedman which has prompted a variety of responses. The present thesis can also been seen as a reaction ...
Maurice Merleau-Ponty`s Criticism on Bergson`s Theory of
... at stake in both philosophies, and the ways in which they express their philosophies. One way of exploring these similarities is by examining how both authors read and use Henri Bergson, a philosopher they knew very well and referred to often in their own work. In this article, I will focus on Bergs ...
... at stake in both philosophies, and the ways in which they express their philosophies. One way of exploring these similarities is by examining how both authors read and use Henri Bergson, a philosopher they knew very well and referred to often in their own work. In this article, I will focus on Bergs ...
Romantic Cosmopolitanism: Novalis`s “Christianity or Europe”
... humanity, and the primeval unity had to be disrupted by the unavoidable development of humanity: “But for this wonderful realm humanity was not yet mature, not yet educated [gebildet] enough” (509/63). The rise of individualism and market capitalism in the early modern period disrupts the community’ ...
... humanity, and the primeval unity had to be disrupted by the unavoidable development of humanity: “But for this wonderful realm humanity was not yet mature, not yet educated [gebildet] enough” (509/63). The rise of individualism and market capitalism in the early modern period disrupts the community’ ...
Essence and Modality The Quintessence of Husserl`s Theory Kevin
... properties (LU Annotationen, 820). But he does not think that all moments are properties (EU, § 32a). What makes this claim difficult to understand is that Husserl very often treats properties as what have been called “unitproperties”. On this conception of properties and relations they are specific ...
... properties (LU Annotationen, 820). But he does not think that all moments are properties (EU, § 32a). What makes this claim difficult to understand is that Husserl very often treats properties as what have been called “unitproperties”. On this conception of properties and relations they are specific ...
Recovering Play: On the Relationship Between Leisure and
... identify the being of beings (Seiendes), where being is interpreted in terms of substance—the enduring properties or ‘what-ness’ of beings, properties that are constantly present.4 For Heidegger, this type of reflection marks the dawn of forgetfulness of a more fundamental experience of being (Sein). ...
... identify the being of beings (Seiendes), where being is interpreted in terms of substance—the enduring properties or ‘what-ness’ of beings, properties that are constantly present.4 For Heidegger, this type of reflection marks the dawn of forgetfulness of a more fundamental experience of being (Sein). ...
Eschatology in a Secular Age - Scholar Commons
... Renaissance, Berdyaev goes back to the Middle Ages, and Heidegger begins with the New Testament documents. Each philosopher demonstrates a familiarity with the subject historically. Chapter Two is an historical overview of eschatology in Western thought. The purpose is not to merely provide a histor ...
... Renaissance, Berdyaev goes back to the Middle Ages, and Heidegger begins with the New Testament documents. Each philosopher demonstrates a familiarity with the subject historically. Chapter Two is an historical overview of eschatology in Western thought. The purpose is not to merely provide a histor ...
as a PDF
... Renaissance, Berdyaev goes back to the Middle Ages, and Heidegger begins with the New Testament documents. Each philosopher demonstrates a familiarity with the subject historically. Chapter Two is an historical overview of eschatology in Western thought. The purpose is not to merely provide a histor ...
... Renaissance, Berdyaev goes back to the Middle Ages, and Heidegger begins with the New Testament documents. Each philosopher demonstrates a familiarity with the subject historically. Chapter Two is an historical overview of eschatology in Western thought. The purpose is not to merely provide a histor ...
Good and Evil: An Absolute Conception, Second Edition
... morally and philosophically important about them and attempts to place them conceptually. The ‘marking’ is, in all three cases, a kind of testimony. In that respect, and others, the book is not morally neutral, but (for good and bad reasons) it is no longer necessary to apologise for that. Good and ...
... morally and philosophically important about them and attempts to place them conceptually. The ‘marking’ is, in all three cases, a kind of testimony. In that respect, and others, the book is not morally neutral, but (for good and bad reasons) it is no longer necessary to apologise for that. Good and ...
Heidegger, Žižek and Revolution
... To experience something, be it a thing, a person, a God, means that this something happens to us, hits us, comes over us, turns us over and changes us. (GA12, 149)2 The same goes, according to Heidegger, for the German revolution that should not be treated as one fact or historical event amongst oth ...
... To experience something, be it a thing, a person, a God, means that this something happens to us, hits us, comes over us, turns us over and changes us. (GA12, 149)2 The same goes, according to Heidegger, for the German revolution that should not be treated as one fact or historical event amongst oth ...
Giambattista Vico`s Idea Of "Progress": The Collapse Of Reason
... Born in Naples on June 23, 1668, Giambattista Vico lived in relative obscurity. Because of his Autobiography. our twentieth century knowledge of his life is more complete than that of any other figure of the period. The fact that he lived in Italy, and not France or England, worked to his disadvanta ...
... Born in Naples on June 23, 1668, Giambattista Vico lived in relative obscurity. Because of his Autobiography. our twentieth century knowledge of his life is more complete than that of any other figure of the period. The fact that he lived in Italy, and not France or England, worked to his disadvanta ...
maimon and deleuze: the viewpoint of internal genesis and the
... that Maimon assumed precisely such an intuitive intellect as “the originator [Urheber] not only of sensible forms but also of their matter, i.e. of objects”.16 For Kant, the idea of an intuitive intellect is absurd, “since we are acquainted with no sort of intuition other than our own sensible one a ...
... that Maimon assumed precisely such an intuitive intellect as “the originator [Urheber] not only of sensible forms but also of their matter, i.e. of objects”.16 For Kant, the idea of an intuitive intellect is absurd, “since we are acquainted with no sort of intuition other than our own sensible one a ...
Plato`s Apology of Socrates: Philosophy, Religion, and the Gods in
... him to change. Judging by Aristophnanes’ prominence in the Apology, it is very likely to be that critique. The recognition that the traditional philosophic approach is insufficiently self-conscious is the beginning of his second sailing. The direct investigation of things can cause what Socrates ca ...
... him to change. Judging by Aristophnanes’ prominence in the Apology, it is very likely to be that critique. The recognition that the traditional philosophic approach is insufficiently self-conscious is the beginning of his second sailing. The direct investigation of things can cause what Socrates ca ...
The New Organon
... guaranteed a serious reception as a work of philosophy. In December , just two months after its official publication date, the English diplomat Henry Wotton, on a mission to Vienna, wrote to Bacon to acknowledge safe receipt of three copies of The New Organon. He was not yet in a position to comme ...
... guaranteed a serious reception as a work of philosophy. In December , just two months after its official publication date, the English diplomat Henry Wotton, on a mission to Vienna, wrote to Bacon to acknowledge safe receipt of three copies of The New Organon. He was not yet in a position to comme ...
The One Fallacy Theory
... Now my One Fallacy theory does not claim that all fallacies are deductive. Equivocation can also mediate inductively invalid arguments. If my account of allowable arguments in philosophy sees these (the allowable arguments) as deductive, it is because I conceive philosophy as deductive, not because ...
... Now my One Fallacy theory does not claim that all fallacies are deductive. Equivocation can also mediate inductively invalid arguments. If my account of allowable arguments in philosophy sees these (the allowable arguments) as deductive, it is because I conceive philosophy as deductive, not because ...
1.Kant`s Account of the Unity
... The fourth and final section of the first chapter will deal with the various attempts to interpret Kant's transcendental self in a physical way - either by saying that the awareness of this "I" is nothing else than the awareness of one's own body, or by trying to give a neurological explanation of t ...
... The fourth and final section of the first chapter will deal with the various attempts to interpret Kant's transcendental self in a physical way - either by saying that the awareness of this "I" is nothing else than the awareness of one's own body, or by trying to give a neurological explanation of t ...
imagination, metaphor and mythopoeia in the poetry of three
... doings are fictions.” On this ground, language is not the ‘dress’ of thought; it is the creator of thought. The theory of metaphor should, then, for Richards, be reformulated. Richards states that a first step for this is to introduce two technical terms: the ‘tenor’ and the ‘vehicle’ (“The Philosop ...
... doings are fictions.” On this ground, language is not the ‘dress’ of thought; it is the creator of thought. The theory of metaphor should, then, for Richards, be reformulated. Richards states that a first step for this is to introduce two technical terms: the ‘tenor’ and the ‘vehicle’ (“The Philosop ...
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.