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Franz Kafka : a dialectical approachBird-Pollan, Stefan January 2003 (has links)
No description available.
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The transformation of space in the architectural thinking of the late nineteenth and early twentieth century, with special reference to GermanyIkonomou, Eleftherios January 1985 (has links)
No description available.
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A critical study of the sociology of culture and aesthetics of T.W. AdornoEdgar, A. R. January 1988 (has links)
No description available.
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Wohnen und Reisen Versuch eines möglichen Gesprächs zwischen der europäischen und der asiatischen Denktradition /Ikeda, Yoshikazu, January 1974 (has links)
Thesis--Freie Universität Berlin. / Bibliography: p. 185-192.
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Wohnen und Reisen Versuch eines möglichen Gesprächs zwischen der europäischen und der asiatischen Denktradition /Ikeda, Yoshikazu, January 1974 (has links)
Thesis--Freie Universität Berlin. / Bibliography: p. 185-192.
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Hegel in Russland. Von Dmitrij Tschizewskij. (Teildr.).Tschižewskij, Dmitrij, January 1934 (has links)
Halle, Phil. Diss. v. 10. Jan. 1935. / Vollst. in: Hegel bei d. Slaven. (Veröff. d. Slavist. Arbeitsgemeinschaft an d. Dt. Univ. in Prag. 1, 9.).
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A Nietzschean Diagnosis of PhilosophersRiggs, Jared 12 August 2016 (has links)
Friedrich Nietzsche thought that philosophers were deeply mistaken about the nature and sources of philosophical activity. Where others took themselves to be motivated by a desire to know the truth, Nietzsche charged that his fellow philosophers, motivated by a pathological set of psychological and physiological characteristics, did little more than sublimate and rationalize their own prejudices. In this thesis, I sketch out in further detail and defend the plausibility and significance of this Nietzschean diagnosis of philosophers. I argue that since Nietzsche’s view of philosophers both offers a compelling explanation of some phenomena in contemporary philosophical practice and, were it true, would have significant upshot for how and even whether philosophy should be practiced, we philosophers ought to begin taking it seriously.
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Nietzsche on truthWarr, Aaron 05 September 2008
Friedrich Nietzsche, 100 years after his death, remains a controversial figure in philosophy.
Much of this controversy stems from Nietzsche's view of truth, which seems superficially
hopelessly contradictory, vacillating between relativism and denial of truth on the one hand, and praise for science and hard truths on the other. Thus, any person wanting to defend Nietzsche's positive philosophy must first make sense of his epistemology. The solution to this puzzle regarding Nietzsche's theory of truth is the realization that Nietzsche changes his view on truth. Much like Wittgenstien, Nietzsche had an early and a late period in his epistemic views, and a middle period where he is struggling with two very different, incompatible views. The late view of truth is surprisingly straightforward: Nietzsche can be seen as an early pragmatist. Once we have a coherent truth theory, we can then start to conclude some of the more contentious arguments in Nietzsche's philosophy, such as: what is the Will to Power, and how does Nietzsche's view of truth interact with his criticism of morality? This thesis will trace the development of the former and endeavor to answer some of the latter.
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Nietzsche on truthWarr, Aaron 05 September 2008 (has links)
Friedrich Nietzsche, 100 years after his death, remains a controversial figure in philosophy.
Much of this controversy stems from Nietzsche's view of truth, which seems superficially
hopelessly contradictory, vacillating between relativism and denial of truth on the one hand, and praise for science and hard truths on the other. Thus, any person wanting to defend Nietzsche's positive philosophy must first make sense of his epistemology. The solution to this puzzle regarding Nietzsche's theory of truth is the realization that Nietzsche changes his view on truth. Much like Wittgenstien, Nietzsche had an early and a late period in his epistemic views, and a middle period where he is struggling with two very different, incompatible views. The late view of truth is surprisingly straightforward: Nietzsche can be seen as an early pragmatist. Once we have a coherent truth theory, we can then start to conclude some of the more contentious arguments in Nietzsche's philosophy, such as: what is the Will to Power, and how does Nietzsche's view of truth interact with his criticism of morality? This thesis will trace the development of the former and endeavor to answer some of the latter.
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Nachidealistische Philosophie und christliches Denken zur Frage nach der Denkbarkeit des Unvordenklichen /Schmidinger, Heinrich M., January 1900 (has links)
The author's Habilitationsschrift--Universität Innsbruck, 1983. / Includes indexes. Bibliography: p. 393-410.
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