Univocity and Analogy: A Comparative Study of Gilbert
... Perhaps the most interesting development of the issue can be found in Michael Murray's article entitled “Heidegger and Ryle: Two Versions of Phenomenology”. In this piece, against which I am arguing here, Murray locates what he perceives to be “a substantial affinity between their works.”5 While I d ...
... Perhaps the most interesting development of the issue can be found in Michael Murray's article entitled “Heidegger and Ryle: Two Versions of Phenomenology”. In this piece, against which I am arguing here, Murray locates what he perceives to be “a substantial affinity between their works.”5 While I d ...
The epistemological tradition in French sociology
... reproduction machine. Later on, after the publication of an English translation of La distinction in 1984, he was on the contrary often regarded rather as a French Thorstein Veblen, i.e. a collector of observations on peoples habits and lifestyles in contemporary society. This contradictory American ...
... reproduction machine. Later on, after the publication of an English translation of La distinction in 1984, he was on the contrary often regarded rather as a French Thorstein Veblen, i.e. a collector of observations on peoples habits and lifestyles in contemporary society. This contradictory American ...
Tiffany Price Intro to Philosophy Mr. Izrailevsky http://tiffanyprice
... should be managed by instinct and conscience. The first and most important of Lao-tzu’s philosophy is the Tao. The idea of the Tao is that your head chooses a path to go forward on. In the book “Archetypes of Wisdom” for this class it explains that the Tao is “the One that is natural, eternal, spon ...
... should be managed by instinct and conscience. The first and most important of Lao-tzu’s philosophy is the Tao. The idea of the Tao is that your head chooses a path to go forward on. In the book “Archetypes of Wisdom” for this class it explains that the Tao is “the One that is natural, eternal, spon ...
the fragility of consciousness: lonergan and the postmodern concern
... pretty much shared by Hobbes, Locke, Hume, and modernity in general. But while Kant shares it too, he does not completely agree with it. He wishes to use the perception model much more strictly and consistently than his predecessors. According to Kant, in order for anything to be an object of knowle ...
... pretty much shared by Hobbes, Locke, Hume, and modernity in general. But while Kant shares it too, he does not completely agree with it. He wishes to use the perception model much more strictly and consistently than his predecessors. According to Kant, in order for anything to be an object of knowle ...
Intentional psychologism - California State University, Los Angeles
... so understood—call it ‘‘token-psychologism’’—that Frege’s objections that numbers are not ideas and that the prescriptive laws of logic and mathematics are not the descriptive laws of thinking most clearly apply.7 If a proposition is a thought token, then (perhaps) it is only accessible to the think ...
... so understood—call it ‘‘token-psychologism’’—that Frege’s objections that numbers are not ideas and that the prescriptive laws of logic and mathematics are not the descriptive laws of thinking most clearly apply.7 If a proposition is a thought token, then (perhaps) it is only accessible to the think ...
5. Conformism and analytic philosophy[11]
... bringing these paradigms before the mind was not to provide an occasion for critical reflection, but merely to provide models to be imitated. It is against this backdrop, Havelock argues, that we are to understand the direction philosophy took in its early years, from the pre-Socratics through Plato ...
... bringing these paradigms before the mind was not to provide an occasion for critical reflection, but merely to provide models to be imitated. It is against this backdrop, Havelock argues, that we are to understand the direction philosophy took in its early years, from the pre-Socratics through Plato ...
roberta de monticelli
... namely, depending on our successive changes of point of view on it. Personality, or the reality of a person, is not accessible by further sensory perception, though it partially is by other ways of acquaintance, such as conversation or, more generally, communication, patient observation, psychologic ...
... namely, depending on our successive changes of point of view on it. Personality, or the reality of a person, is not accessible by further sensory perception, though it partially is by other ways of acquaintance, such as conversation or, more generally, communication, patient observation, psychologic ...
Hegel`s Phenomenology of Spirit Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel
... Jews objectified God as being above and outside the finite (which Hegel calls “bad infinity”) but Christ discovered infinite life within himself – hence the unity can only be lived as Christ lived in a life of love. Overcoming the finite and infinite without losing either is love, not thought. Yet i ...
... Jews objectified God as being above and outside the finite (which Hegel calls “bad infinity”) but Christ discovered infinite life within himself – hence the unity can only be lived as Christ lived in a life of love. Overcoming the finite and infinite without losing either is love, not thought. Yet i ...
Epistemic Line of Explanation for Experimental
... latter, with Railton, who maintains: “Where the orthodox covering-law account of explanation propounded by Hempel and others was right has been in claiming that explanatory practice in the sciences is in a central way law-seeking or nomothetic. Where it went wrong was in interpreting this fact as gr ...
... latter, with Railton, who maintains: “Where the orthodox covering-law account of explanation propounded by Hempel and others was right has been in claiming that explanatory practice in the sciences is in a central way law-seeking or nomothetic. Where it went wrong was in interpreting this fact as gr ...
Fourth Person. From the Impersonal to the Unavailable
... by a brief comment. Esposito claims that: «If life should not be postposited, neither should it be presupposed to the subjects that are embodying it every time. Rather, life has to be conceived as the living substance of their infinite singularity».9 This is the goal, Esposito then states in a footn ...
... by a brief comment. Esposito claims that: «If life should not be postposited, neither should it be presupposed to the subjects that are embodying it every time. Rather, life has to be conceived as the living substance of their infinite singularity».9 This is the goal, Esposito then states in a footn ...
1 - Valpo Blogs
... nothing to the concept of a thing. The point can be traced all the way back to Aristotle, who argued that particularity (and hence individual existence) enters neither into the essence nor the account/definition of a thing. This is the perspective I had in mind when I distinguished the what from the ...
... nothing to the concept of a thing. The point can be traced all the way back to Aristotle, who argued that particularity (and hence individual existence) enters neither into the essence nor the account/definition of a thing. This is the perspective I had in mind when I distinguished the what from the ...
Philosophy as Dependable Analysis:
... around in these indeterminate circles? The answer, I guess, is that we are thinking about human thinking activities. Or more specifically, our attempt to define philosophy, even from a practical point of view, already presupposes some philosophical standpoint. That is something we should stop to pon ...
... around in these indeterminate circles? The answer, I guess, is that we are thinking about human thinking activities. Or more specifically, our attempt to define philosophy, even from a practical point of view, already presupposes some philosophical standpoint. That is something we should stop to pon ...
The Philosopher and the Poet
... the structure of allegory is essential to phenomenology. Janicaud implicitly points to the allegorical structure of Phänomensein, what it is to be a phenomenon by quoting Heidegger on Hegel. To be a phenomenon [Phänomensein], to appear [Erscheinen] means coming forward [auftreten] in such a way that ...
... the structure of allegory is essential to phenomenology. Janicaud implicitly points to the allegorical structure of Phänomensein, what it is to be a phenomenon by quoting Heidegger on Hegel. To be a phenomenon [Phänomensein], to appear [Erscheinen] means coming forward [auftreten] in such a way that ...
Laruelle, Art, and the Scientific Model
... generic' (or what for Laruelle would be a Non-aesthetics) might be made intelligible for artistic practice, and also because it will help to understand how Laruelle establishes the 'generic science' of Non-philosophy. There have already been several attempts to compare the work of Laruelle and Althu ...
... generic' (or what for Laruelle would be a Non-aesthetics) might be made intelligible for artistic practice, and also because it will help to understand how Laruelle establishes the 'generic science' of Non-philosophy. There have already been several attempts to compare the work of Laruelle and Althu ...
“An Event in Sound”1 Considerations on the Ethical
... What united the original group of like-minded academics was an inclination to integrate the diverse social disciplines and their experiential practices; they were all “sailing under the flag of the personal responsibility and social engagement of the individual human being” (Levering & van Manen, 20 ...
... What united the original group of like-minded academics was an inclination to integrate the diverse social disciplines and their experiential practices; they were all “sailing under the flag of the personal responsibility and social engagement of the individual human being” (Levering & van Manen, 20 ...
A Beginner`s Guide to Descartes`s Meditations
... where the nature of the mind is considered, or the possible existence of the soul is debated, Descartes is likely at some point to put in an appearance. However, Descartes is also important in other respects. Firstly, he is in many ways representative of an age. The seventeenth century marked a turn ...
... where the nature of the mind is considered, or the possible existence of the soul is debated, Descartes is likely at some point to put in an appearance. However, Descartes is also important in other respects. Firstly, he is in many ways representative of an age. The seventeenth century marked a turn ...
The Influence and Application of Eastern Philosophy
... vocal part, and the text nicely depicts the fundamental suffering that Schopenhauer associates with existence: “the world is deep... deeps is its woe.” The text is taken from a poem by Friedrich Nietzsche, whose original philosophical musings were prompted by conversations with Wagner and thus also ...
... vocal part, and the text nicely depicts the fundamental suffering that Schopenhauer associates with existence: “the world is deep... deeps is its woe.” The text is taken from a poem by Friedrich Nietzsche, whose original philosophical musings were prompted by conversations with Wagner and thus also ...
Business Ethics and Early Modern French Philosophy at the
... immediate experience. In this sense, Bergson seems to announce a program of spirituality as a possible new understanding of life. In Matière et mémoire: Essai sur la relation entre corps et esprit (1896) Bergson continued his work on his theory of consciousness. Henri Bergson wanted to solve the c ...
... immediate experience. In this sense, Bergson seems to announce a program of spirituality as a possible new understanding of life. In Matière et mémoire: Essai sur la relation entre corps et esprit (1896) Bergson continued his work on his theory of consciousness. Henri Bergson wanted to solve the c ...
James Hill`s `Descartes` Dreaming Argument and why we might be
... sense of the absurd. In dreaming, he claimed, we take in all kinds of bizarre happenings without batting an eyelid. It does not occur to us that what we are experiencing is so crazy that it can only be an illusion. In waking life, on the other hand, our sense of the absurd is perfectly alive and so, ...
... sense of the absurd. In dreaming, he claimed, we take in all kinds of bizarre happenings without batting an eyelid. It does not occur to us that what we are experiencing is so crazy that it can only be an illusion. In waking life, on the other hand, our sense of the absurd is perfectly alive and so, ...
The Gedankenexperiment - Philsci-Archive
... us something important about the conceptual structure of quantum mechanics. In the same vein today the existence of different interpretations of quantum mechanics which are empirically equivalent up to very special situations, provides important insights into the significant leeway within this theor ...
... us something important about the conceptual structure of quantum mechanics. In the same vein today the existence of different interpretations of quantum mechanics which are empirically equivalent up to very special situations, provides important insights into the significant leeway within this theor ...
Epistemology Dehumanized
... though neither guilt nor innocence is self-evident or made evident by anything that is selfevident. So we look for something else we hope is relevant to guilt or innocence, and call it “evidence,” whether “beyond reasonable doubt” or not, and whether just “circumstantial” or not. If we think such ev ...
... though neither guilt nor innocence is self-evident or made evident by anything that is selfevident. So we look for something else we hope is relevant to guilt or innocence, and call it “evidence,” whether “beyond reasonable doubt” or not, and whether just “circumstantial” or not. If we think such ev ...
johannes bronkhorst trv murti`s reason
... order to understand Indian philosophy. In this form this observation is certainly incorrect, for countless Indian philosophers did not know any Western philosophy and yet understood very well what they were doing. It cannot however be denied that one needs to know at least some Western philosophy in ...
... order to understand Indian philosophy. In this form this observation is certainly incorrect, for countless Indian philosophers did not know any Western philosophy and yet understood very well what they were doing. It cannot however be denied that one needs to know at least some Western philosophy in ...
Scholar`s Session on David Wood - Vanderbilt College of Arts and
... David Wood is arguably the one among us who has understood most clearly what it means to think after Derrida. 1 I mean this “after” in the various senses that David has himself articulated when discussing what it would mean to think after Heidegger: in the wake of and in some sense beyond, but also ...
... David Wood is arguably the one among us who has understood most clearly what it means to think after Derrida. 1 I mean this “after” in the various senses that David has himself articulated when discussing what it would mean to think after Heidegger: in the wake of and in some sense beyond, but also ...
- Philsci
... stream of conscious experience – or only sometimes? Is their phenomenology, their experiential character, always more or less the same, or does it differ widely from case to case? For example, is joy sometimes in the head, sometimes more visceral, sometimes a thrill, sometimes an expansiveness – or, ...
... stream of conscious experience – or only sometimes? Is their phenomenology, their experiential character, always more or less the same, or does it differ widely from case to case? For example, is joy sometimes in the head, sometimes more visceral, sometimes a thrill, sometimes an expansiveness – or, ...
French philosophy
French philosophy, here taken to mean philosophy in the French language, has been extremely diverse and has influenced Western philosophy as a whole for centuries, from the medieval scholasticism of Peter Abelard, through the founding of modern philosophy by René Descartes, to 20th century existentialism, phenomenology and structuralism.