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An investigation on the establishment of a Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC) for the Republic of IndonesiaArief, Dinie Suryadini Mukti 05 December 2012 (has links)
Please read the abstract in the front section of this document. / Dissertation (LLM)--University of Pretoria, 2013. / Centre for Human Rights / unrestricted
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Will to Power: The Philosophical Expression of Nietzsche's Love of LifeCassidy, Pierre January 2011 (has links)
Any adequate interpretation of the concept of the will to power, given the radical break with the history of philosophy it presupposes, requires a preceding analysis of Nietzsche’s critique of the history of philosophy as a critique of metaphysics. Only once Nietzsche’s critique of metaphysics is properly understood as a critique of, in the broadest sense, any correspondence conception of truth, can the philosophical concept of the will to power, as a product of that critique, be understood as well. Each of the three typical types of interpretative approaches to the will to power (i.e. as a metaphysical concept, as an empirical concept, as an object of interpretive play) will provide a critically constructive opportunity to narrow an acceptable definition of Nietzsche’s positive conception of philosophy as a distinctive and unorthodox type of history, according to which any interpretation rests, not on truths, but on its author’s prejudices or fundamental values. Moreover, using Gilles Deleuze’s largely ignored or otherwise grossly misunderstood Nietzsche et la philosophie, a non-normative, post-metaphysical justification consistent with that critique can then be provided for Nietzsche’s radical reform to the philosophical method. According to Nietzsche, philosophy as a will to power is preferable to philosophy as a will to truth because it is consistent with his profound and unjustified love of life. In fact, the will to power it is the philosophical expression of that love.
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Getting Beyond Good and Evil: Reconciling Naturalism and Skepticism in Nietzsche's Middle PeriodGirard, David January 2016 (has links)
Philosophers such as Clark and Leiter propose that Nietzsche’s position on the concept of truth, while controversial in his early and middle periods, developed into something far less radical in his later works. They claim that Nietzsche should be understood as a naturalist who contends that we can attain truth, and that his falsification thesis, along with skeptical interpretations of it, is incoherent due to self-contradiction. I challenge these thinkers and what I call the naturalist interpretations because if Nietzsche’s middle period is incoherent then little or nothing can be seen as valuable in GS, Z, or BGE. In order to defend Nietzsche from his alleged self-contradiction I examine positions offered by Clark & Dudrick and Berry who attempt to offer a coherent interpretation of his middle period. While neither provides a convincing position, they help me reveal that what Nietzsche calls “strong skepticism” is integral towards his project. Strong skepticism is the notion that we should continuously perpetuate inquiry, while also creating new values. Nietzsche’s project is to get beyond good and evil, which can be achieved by recognizing untruth as a strong skeptic. To get beyond good and evil, Nietzsche asserts that the thing-in-itself must be properly rejected along with any other metaphysical faith. In so doing philosophers of the future can create new values by being honest about their personal judgements as well as recognizing that falsification is necessary for getting around in the world. Ultimately, I conclude that Nietzsche is neither a skeptic nor a naturalist, and instead utilizes elements from both without committing to either.
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Violence in Africa : the role of accountability in protecting the right to lifeSithebe, Khulisumuzi Kenneth January 2014 (has links)
Dissertation (LLM)--University of Pretoria, 2014 / gm2015 / Centre for Human Rights / LLM / Unrestricted
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Pravda a význam: dialektika teorie a praxe / Truth and Meaning: The Dialectics of Theory and PracticeKoreň, Ladislav January 2011 (has links)
Tarski's semantic conception of truth is arguably the most influential - certainly, most discussed - modern conception of truth. It has provoked many different interpretations and reactions, some thinkers celebrating it for successfully explicating the notion of truth, whereas others have argued that it is no good as a philosophical account of truth. The aim of the thesis is to offer a systematic and critical investigation of its nature and significance, based on the thorough explanation of its conceptual, technical as well as historical underpinnings. The methodological strategy adopted in the thesis reflects the author's belief that in order to evaluate the import of Tarski's conception we need to understand what logical, mathematical and philosophical aspects it has, what role they play in his project of theoretical semantics, which of them hang in together, and which should be kept separate. Chapter 2 therefore starts with a detailed exposition of the conceptual and historical background of Tarski's semantic conception of truth and his method of truth definition for formalized languages, situating it within his project of theoretical semantics, and Chapter 3 explains the formal machinery of Tarski's truth definitions for increasingly more complex languages. Chapters 4-7 form the core of the...
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The Hyperreal Nature of the Trump Administration's Post-Truth RhetoricSharp, Alexander V. 22 June 2020 (has links)
No description available.
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Lying with the TruthWarnott, Emily Dohoney 27 November 2013 (has links)
No description available.
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Ontology of artifactsTobar Arbulu, José Felix. January 1984 (has links)
No description available.
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BEYOND TRUTH AND FALSITY: AN ANALYSIS OF PART ONE OF NIETZSCHE’S BEYOND GOOD AND EVILHudia, Jeremy 22 July 2009 (has links)
No description available.
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Representations of Truth and Falsehood in Hellenistic PoetryKidder, Kathleen 29 May 2018 (has links)
No description available.
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