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-1- HUSSERL`S DISCOVERY OF PHILOSOPHICAL DISCOURSE
-1- HUSSERL`S DISCOVERY OF PHILOSOPHICAL DISCOURSE

... in Husserl, and in Plato Socrates (or his replacements) is the one who has carried out the transcendental reduction. Now, the citizen and the ruler or lawgiver are themselves already engaged in the truth of things. They are part of a city and not a herd, and so their laws, customs, and actions are ...
here
here

... indigenous ontologies as unities and — on the basis of that small misstep — fall into an ethnographic habit of making all lived ontologies collectively and inevitably point — like perspectival bodies — to an immanent-transcendent multiplicity posited as shifting-absolute truth. (And I’m not saying t ...
The Four-Color Theorem and its Philosophical Significance
The Four-Color Theorem and its Philosophical Significance

... that we surveyed leaves no room for doubt. So it is with all mathematical proofs; to say that they can be surveyed is to say that they can be definitively checked by members of the mathematical community. Of course, some surveyable proofs are very long. They might take months for even a trained math ...
LEARNING TO BE HUMAN: THE IMPLICATIONS OF CONFUCIAN
LEARNING TO BE HUMAN: THE IMPLICATIONS OF CONFUCIAN

... human being as an end, which completes the circle. Reaching this end gives authentic power, provides with a base for, ideally Confucian termed sage, to unit with the universe, other beings, and the self, realistically, Jun Zi through self-cultivation and is illustrated by the daily regular activity ...
Descartes` Epistemology
Descartes` Epistemology

... – “Archimedes, in order that he might draw the terrestrial globe out of its place, and transport it elsewhere, demanded only that one point should be fixed and immoveable; in the same way, I shall have the right to have high hopes, if I am happy enough to discover one thing only which is certain an ...
reply to JJ Valberg - Keele Research Repository
reply to JJ Valberg - Keele Research Repository

... look out of the window in this situation, you can see the landscape passing by, but also a myriad of reflections from the inside of the carriage. What you see can be quite a mess, which it takes some thought to make any worldly sense of; I find myself not really sure what I am looking at and typical ...
1 "Plato on Akrasia and Knowing Your Own Mind" Section 1
1 "Plato on Akrasia and Knowing Your Own Mind" Section 1

... beliefs and desires, since this is open to the Hobbesian deliberator--indeed it is assumed by Hobbes to be part of the picture.) I must, for example, notice conflicts or tensions among my beliefs and desires, consider how to resolve them by considering consequences of various courses of action, call ...
Disagreement and Skepticism
Disagreement and Skepticism

... fact of the matter on at least most controversial issues, (ii) there is theoryneutral evidence by means of which we can access the truth of the matter, and (iii) many peer disagreements can be settled by determining who has correctly responded to such evidence. The reason for focusing on Pyrrhonian ...
Logos and Forms in Phaedo 96a-102a
Logos and Forms in Phaedo 96a-102a

... immortal (86e-88b)? While for Simmias the soul is a product of the body, in the objection raised by Cebes the soul appears as the cause of the body, but, however, is »worn out« in its effort to »weave afresh« the »garments« or bodies (87d-e). Having opposed the first objection by providing three argum ...
PDF - Berkeley Buddhist studies
PDF - Berkeley Buddhist studies

... concepts such as “person,” “self,” “agency,” “consciousness,” and “mind.” Welldocumented phenomena such as brain-fission,6 blind sight, inattentional blindness, automatism, prosopagnosia, and Cotard’s syndrome—to cite some of the betterknown examples—undermine our deepest intuitions about what it is ...
- Esamskriti
- Esamskriti

... have such fascinating and stimulating questions that they have inspired the East for more than 5000 years. What were those intriguing questions of the ancient Indian minds that make India a land of perennial philosophy? In the sphere of religion and spirituality, the ‘Upanishads’ collectively called ...
Deontological ethics - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Deontological ethics - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

... Contemporary deontologists include Thomas Nagel, Thomas Scanlon and Frances Kamm. Frances Kamm's 'Principle of Permissible Harm' is an effort to derive a deontological constraint which coheres with our considered case judgments while also relying heavily on Kant's Categorical Imperative. [21] The Pr ...
as pdf - Free Buddhist Audio
as pdf - Free Buddhist Audio

... Abstract. Rudyard Kipling, the famous english author of “The Jungle Book”, born in India, wrote one day these words: “Oh, East is East and West is West, and never the twain shall meet.” In my paper I show that Kipling was not completely right. I try to show the common ground between buddhist philoso ...
Word - John Provost, PhD
Word - John Provost, PhD

... this does not matter and may even be wise! But other times not taking a stand is actually making an important choice in terms of ethics. If you see someone being hurt and you do not do anything to stop it, what does that say about your character? “Simply refraining from harming others is not enough ...
IOSR Journal Of Humanities And Social Science (IOSR-JHSS)
IOSR Journal Of Humanities And Social Science (IOSR-JHSS)

... Thus after giving a clear cut definition and explanation of substance Descartes delineates the characteristics of both mind and body. He says that both mind and body are substances having antagonistic characteristics and found nothing in common between them. The features which are present in one are ...
The Netz-Works of Greek Deductions - A Review of - Hal-SHS
The Netz-Works of Greek Deductions - A Review of - Hal-SHS

... BCA. These of course are the very forms of reasoning at the core of the scientific imagination. No matter how excellent the other studies of mathematical practices at later periods have been, they have always relied (like their subject matter) on an already rich repertoire of techniques and literary ...
Writing Your Philosophy Paper: Common Problems
Writing Your Philosophy Paper: Common Problems

... views of the person you’re discussing, and having no space for developing, and arguing for, your own views. Make sure you allow enough room in your paper to lay out your argument. You need only as much explanation of other people’s views as you require to get your own argument going. (But you do nee ...
Metaethical Principles, Meta-Prescriptions, and Moral Theories
Metaethical Principles, Meta-Prescriptions, and Moral Theories

... competition with theirs entail moral judgments that are rejected by most people, while their own moral theory yields acceptable results. This method of establishing and refuting moral theories is looked upon with suspicion, however, and for several reasons. First, it is not clear that there is a uni ...
Mencius - Steve Watson
Mencius - Steve Watson

... of all were equally important, while for the followers of Yang Chu one’s own interests were all-important. It’s sometimes thought to be odd that Mencius should have mentioned Yang Chu so prominently in that passage, because Yang does not really seem to have been of much importance at this time – or, ...
El lenguaje, el tiempo y la inmortalidad en los cuentos de Jorge Luis
El lenguaje, el tiempo y la inmortalidad en los cuentos de Jorge Luis

... knew it all and invented it all!” • Borges uses his infinite universal literature knowledge on every single literary creation • Philosophical and metaphysical concepts were his obsessions!! • The complex concepts of TIME, LANGUAGE AND INMORTALITY are, undoubtedly, the purpose of his prominent work. ...
View - Fr. Anthony Akinwale, OP
View - Fr. Anthony Akinwale, OP

... lived in the realm of meaning and not just techniques. The achievements of science and technology have made life more livable, and the planet more habitable, even if we were to take into account the problem of ecological degradation. But the ecological degradation we witness is itself an offshoot of ...
saying and showing the good
saying and showing the good

... Nevertheless, like consequentialism, such moral realism remains beholden to the future, and thus to time. It does enjoin us to take into account all the consequences of an action and all the organic wholes of which it is a part, for genuinely moral thought sets no date and no place beyond which what ...
Ethics bedfellows
Ethics bedfellows

... method. It is a good method caught in a bad relationship. For its presumptive metaethical companion, realism, would have us believe that intuitions support beliefs about real, stance-independent facts of the matter. That strikes many as dubious. After sorting through some relevant concerns in this v ...
Morality and Virtue In Poetry and Philosophy
Morality and Virtue In Poetry and Philosophy

... Morality and Virtue In Poetry and Philosophy: A Reading of Homer’s Iliad XXIV Hektor K. T. Yan City University of Hong Kong ...
MODELS OF POSSIBILISM AND TRIVIALISM
MODELS OF POSSIBILISM AND TRIVIALISM

... i.e. there are no necessary truths and everything is possible. In section 3 I use the apparatus of relational structures used in the semantics for modal logics to engineer some models of possibilism and trivialism. More than one may miss the philosophical bases of the analyses in section 3, so in se ...
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List of unsolved problems in philosophy

This is a list of some of the major unsolved problems in philosophy. Clearly, unsolved philosophical problems exist in the lay sense (e.g. ""What is the meaning of life?"", ""Where did we come from?"", ""What is reality?"", etc.). However, professional philosophers generally accord serious philosophical problems specific names or questions, which indicate a particular method of attack or line of reasoning. As a result, broad and untenable topics become manageable. It would therefore be beyond the scope of this article to categorize ""life"" (and similar vague categories) as an unsolved philosophical problem.
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