Results for '18th Brumaire'

967 found
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  1.  19
    Fuller's '18th Brumaire of Thomas K'.Paul Roth - 2003 - Social Epistemology 17 (2-3):281-289.
  2.  24
    Demobilized democracy: Plebiscitarianism as political theology.Ian Zuckerman - forthcoming - Philosophy and Social Criticism.
    Drawing from Marx’s 18 th Brumaire of Louis Bonaparte and the work of Carl Schmitt, this article proposes a framework that critically diagnoses the plebiscitary, executive-centered conception of democratic representation as a species of political theology. I reconstruct Marx’s comments on plebiscitarianism in The 18 th Brumaire through his earlier critique of political theology in ‘On the Jewish Question’, in order to contrast two modes of representation. The first, ‘ theological’ representation, is a symbolic incarnation of the unity (...)
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  3. (1 other version)Advaitarasamañjarī.Sadaśivendra Sarasvatī & 18Th Cent - 1946 - Trivandrum : University Manuscripts Library,:
     
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  4. Eighteenth brumaire of Louis Bonaparte.Karl Marx - unknown
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  5.  53
    The Eighteenth Brumaire in historical context: reconsidering class and state in France and Syria.Jonathan Viger - 2019 - Theory and Society 48 (4):611-638.
    This article seeks to reinterpret the process of state and class formation in “peripheral” societies—notably Syria—through a contextualized reading of Marx’s Eighteenth Brumaire influenced by the approach of Political Marxism (PM). In light of PM’s claim that capitalism did not emerge in France until the late nineteenth century, it draws a picture of post-revolutionary French society in which the legacy of the precapitalist Absolutist state still determined the nature of ruling class reproduction and class struggle, centered on the state (...)
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  6.  21
    Transmitting Knowledge in the 18th Century: The Case of Président de Brosses and Abate Antonio Niccolini.John Rogister - 2008 - Diogenes 55 (2):77 - 82.
    The 18th century in Europe is the ideal period to study the interaction of traditional beliefs and new ideas stemming from scientific observation and philosophical rationalization. The purpose of this paper is to examine the role played by Charles de Brosses and Antonio Niccolini in the process of transmission of knowledge coming through influential members of a European aristocracy that remained attached to traditional values. In fact, the rediscovery of the Classical heritage and its dissemination in print, albeit an (...)
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  7.  31
    -18th centuries.Nick Gier - manuscript
    The term "Mughal" comes from a mispronunciation of the word "Mongol," but the Mughals of India were mostly ethnic Turks not Mongolians. However, Barbur (1483-1530), the first Mughal emperor, could trace his blood line back to Chinggis Khan. The Muslims of Central Asia had good reason to hate the Mongols because they destroyed the Abbasid Caliphate when they sacked Baghdad in 1258. During the 300 years after the death of Chinggis, the Mongol Empire had split into four parts: the Golden (...)
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  8.  62
    Moral motivation in early 18th century moral rationalism.Daniel Eggers - 2019 - European Journal of Philosophy 27 (3):552-574.
    In the modern debate in metaethics and moral psychology, moral rationalism is often presented as a view that cannot account for the intimate relation between moral behaviour on one hand and feelings, emotions, or desires on the other. Although there is no lack of references to the classic rationalists of the 18th century in the relevant discussions, the works of these writers are rarely ever examined detail. Yet, as the debate in Kant scholarship between “intellectualists” and “affectivists” impressively shows, (...)
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  9.  34
    The 18th International Conference for Chinese Philosophy: “Chinese Philosophy and the Way of Living”.Timothy Connolly - 2013 - Journal of Chinese Philosophy 40 (S1):272-272.
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  10. 18th Amsterdam Colloquium.M. Aloni (ed.) - 2012 - Springer.
  11. De thermidor à brumaire: La victoire de «la vaste conspiration contre Les droits naturels».Yannick Bosc - 2013 - Corpus: Revue de philosophie 64:149-172.
     
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  12. The Eighteenth Brumaire of Abraham Lincoln: revolutionary rhetoric and the emergence of the Bourgeois state.Eric Lott - 1993 - Clio: A Journal of Literature, History, and the Philosophy of History 22 (2):157-173.
     
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  13. Representation in The Eighteenth Brumaire of Karl Marx.Harry Redner - 1989 - Manuscrito. Revista Internacional de Filosofia 12 (1):7-37.
     
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  14.  31
    18th century French aesthetics.Jacques Morizot - 2008 - Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
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  15.  7
    18th Annual Legislative Update.Susanne J. Phillips - 2006 - Jona's Healthcare Law, Ethics, and Regulation 8 (2):60-64.
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  16. Self-Love in Early 18th Century British Moral Philosophy: Shaftesbury, Mandeville, Hutcheson, Butler and Campbell.Christian Maurer - 2009 - Dissertation, Neuchâtel
    The study focuses on the debates on self-love in early 18th - century British moral philosophy. It examines the intricate relations of these debates with questions concerning human nature and morality in five central authors : Anthony Ashley Cooper the 3rd Earl of Shaftesbury, Bernard Mandeville, Francis Hutcheson, Joseph Butler and Archibald Campbell. One of the central claims of this study is that a distinction between five different concepts of self-love is necessary to achieve a clear understanding of the (...)
     
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  17. 18th century German aesthetics.Paul Guyer - 2008 - Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
  18.  42
    William James and 18th-century anthropology.Jerome Carroll - 2018 - History of the Human Sciences 31 (3):3-20.
    This article discusses the common ground between William James and the tradition of philosophical anthropology. Recent commentators on this overlap have characterised philosophical anthropology as combining science (in particular biology and medicine) and Kantian teleology, for instance in Kant’s seminal definition of anthropology as being concerned with what the human being makes of itself, as distinct from what attributes it is given by nature. This article registers the tension between Kantian thinking, which reckons to ground experience in a priori categories, (...)
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  19. (1 other version)18th Century German Philosophy prior to Kant.Corey W. Dyck & Brigitte Sassen - forthcoming - Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
  20. 18th IEEE International Conference on Image Processing.Charles R. Twardy (ed.) - 2011 - IEEE.
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  21.  77
    The 18th-Century Body and the Origins of Human Rights.Lynn Hunt - 2004 - Diogenes 51 (3):41-56.
    Recent historical work on changing perceptions of the human body has been influenced by Michel Foucault’s contention that the self of western individualism was created by new regimes of disciplining the body. A different approach is taken here, one that focuses on how individual bodies came to be viewed as separate and inviolable, that is, as autonomous. The separateness and inviolability of bodies can be traced in the histories of bodily practices as different as portraiture and legal torture. After 1750, (...)
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  22.  84
    Scottish Philosophy in the 18th Century.Alexander Broadie - 2001 - Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
    Philosophy was at the core of the eighteenth century movement known as the Scottish Enlightenment. The movement included major figures, such as Francis Hutcheson, David Hume, Adam Smith, Thomas Reid and Adam Ferguson, and also many others who produced notable works, such as Gershom Carmichael, George Turnbull, George Campbell, James Beattie, Alexander Gerard, Henry Home (Lord Kames) and Dugald Stewart. I discuss some of the leading ideas of these thinkers, though paying less attention than I otherwise would to Hume, Smith (...)
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  23.  15
    Common Sense in Early 18th-Century British Literature and Culture: Ethics, Aesthetics, and Politics, 1680-1750.Christoph Henke - 2014 - De Gruyter.
    In a time of political, epistemic and aesthetic revolutions, early 18th-century Britain saw the emergence of a public discourse of common sense which had a lasting influence on cliched concepts of cultural identity. By retracing the compensatory impulses of common sense discourse and highlighting the role of literary texts in its formation and dissemination, this study challenges the received view of Augustan England as a mere Age of Reason.".
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  24.  42
    The Surplus of the Machine: Trope and History in The Eighteenth Brumaire of Louis Bonaparte.Matthew W. Bost & Matthew S. May - 2016 - Philosophy and Rhetoric 49 (1):1-25.
    This article stages a new encounter between rhetoric and the philosophy of Karl Marx. We argue that the configuration of two major tropes in Marx’s 1852 pamphlet The Eighteenth Brumaire of Louis Bonaparte renders explicit the operative but implicit logics of Marxian historical materialism. Our reading therefore makes available a novel and untimely dimension of Marx’s conceptual labor where we least expect to find it: in a text that has been largely, but not exclusively, understood as a history of (...)
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  25.  14
    18th and 19th century German linguistics.Christopher Hutton, Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz, Christian Wolff, Johann Christoph Adelung, Johann Christoph Gottsched, Johann Gottfried Herder, Dietrich Tiedemann, Johann Gottlieb Fichte, Friedrich von Schlegel, Franz Bopp, Wilhelm von Humboldt, Heymann Steinthal, Jacob Grimm, August Friedrich Pott, August Schleicher, Georg von der Gabelentz, Hermann Paul & Wilhelm Max Wundt (eds.) - 1717 - Tokyo: Kinokuniya.
  26.  22
    Palestine in the 18th Century. Patterns of Government and Administration.George J. Koury, Amnon Cohen & D. Bernstein - 1979 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 99 (1):144.
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  27.  22
    Booksellers’ networks between the German and Hungarian book markets in the late 18th century.Petronela Bulková - 2013 - Human Affairs 23 (3):359-372.
    In the study the author focuses on various aspects of bookselling in the late 18th century. The author seeks to describe the book market environment and the booksellers’ community in Bratislava at that time. She therefore documents communication channels between booksellers in Bratislava and their colleagues in Germany (mainly in Leipzig, Halle, and Berlin).
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  28.  8
    Routledge Library Editions: 18th Century Philosophy. Various - 1991 - Routledge.
    This collection reissues 17 titles that provide an excellent overview of 18th century philosophy - as well as the debates that surround the topic. Featuring works on Berkeley, Hume, Kant and Rousseau, among others, the collection examines a host of philosophical arguments by the leading thinkers of the time. It is an essential reference collection.
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  29.  4
    Voltaire, Maupertuis and the 18th century debate on the principle of least action: scientific and extrascientific features.Roberto de Andrade Martins & Ana Paula Bispo da Silva - 2021 - Filosofia Unisinos 8 (2).
    Towards the middle of the 18th century, Pierre-Louis Moreau de Maupertuis proposed the “principle of least action” as a fundamental law of physics and as a proof of the existence of God. Samuel König and other contemporary authors criticized Maupertuis’ work. There ensued a fierce discussion concerning this subject, in which Leonhard Euler, the king Frédéric II of Prussia and Voltaire took part. This paper discusses that debate, emphasizing its extrascientific features and analyzing the interests that motivated the actions (...)
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  30.  35
    The problems of national history in the school literature of the 18th - beginning of the 20th centuries.O. S. Abramkin - 2015 - Liberal Arts in Russia 4 (6):496.
    The analysis of historical literature allows to consider profoundly the development of national culture and science of the 18th-first half of the 20th centuries and the formation and change of different historical concepts. With the analysis of historical periods that are highlighted in the research, general trends in the changing of paradigms about Russian historical development were concluded, which were translated to mass historical consciousness from the beginning of the 18th century up to 1917. The periods were closely (...)
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  31.  41
    A material perspective on 18th-century chemistry: Ursula Klein and Wolfgang Lefèvre: Materials in eighteenth-century science: a historical ontology. The MIT Press, Cambridge, MA, 2008. x + 345 pp, £24.95 HB.Jonathan Simon - 2010 - Metascience 19 (1):71-73.
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  32.  23
    An Inexplicable Effect of Imagination. Mothers’ Imagination and Its Impact on the Perceptions and Body of the Fetus. Successes and Refutations of the Malebranchist Paradigm in the 18th Century or the Fascinating Question of Psychophysical Interaction.Véronique Costa - 2024 - Iris 44.
    An error that medicine has long shared is to attribute to a desire or an effect of the mother’s imagination during gestation, the deformities, growths or spots that a child bears at birth. The imagination would be capable of imprinting external modifications on a matter and would have an impact on the perceptions and sensory development of the fetus. Returning briefly to the genealogy and posterity of the topos, this article focuses on the successes and refutations of the Malebranchist paradigm (...)
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  33.  41
    Report on the 18th international social philosophy conference.Samantha Brennan & Todd Calder - 2003 - Journal of Value Inquiry 37 (1):101-107.
  34. Recent works on 18th-century philosophy.F. Vansteenberghen - 1991 - Revue Philosophique De Louvain 89 (82):302-322.
  35. An 18th century precedent in'ethical-political'binomials?Giuseppe Galasso - 2012 - Giornale Critico Della Filosofia Italiana 8 (2):340-348.
  36.  13
    End of a Pandemic? Contemporary Explanations for the End of Plague in 18th‑Century England.Paul Slack - 2022 - Centaurus 64 (1):87-98.
    The great plague in London in 1665 was the last in a series of epidemics that had begun with the Black Death in the 14th century. Plagues continued elsewhere in Europe into the 18th century, but after 1679 no cases of plague were reported in England at all. The disease seemed to have disappeared. How could that be explained? The purpose of this paper is to discover when contemporaries began to think that plague had gone for good, and why (...)
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  37.  12
    Le Directoire. Du 11 brumaire an IV, au 18 fructidor an V. [REVIEW]Karl Falke - 1935 - Zeitschrift für Sozialforschung 4 (1):122-123.
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  38.  45
    Conceptual and Mathematical Structures of Mechanical Science in the Western Civilization around 18th Century.Raffaele Pisano & Danilo Capecchi - 2013 - Almagest 4 (2):86-21.
    One may discuss the role played by mechanical science in the history of scientific ideas, particularly in physics, focusing on the significance of the relationship between physics and mathematics in describing mathematical laws in the context of a scientific theory. In the second Newtonian law of motion, space and time are crucial physical magnitudes in mechanics, but they are also mathematical magnitudes as involved in derivative operations. Above all, if we fail to acknowledge their mathematical meaning, we fail to comprehend (...)
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  39.  14
    Lutheran Clergy in an Orthodox Empire. The Apppointment of Pastors in the Russo-Swedish Borderland in the 18th Century.Antti Räihä - 2015 - Perichoresis 13 (2):57-75.
    The history of the parishioners’ right to participate in and influence the choice of local clergy in Sweden and Finland can be taken back as far as the late Medieval Times. The procedures for electing clergymen are described in historiography as a specifically Nordic feature and as creating the basis of local self-government. In this article the features of local self-government are studied in a context where the scope for action was being modified. The focus is on the parishioners’ possibilities (...)
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  40.  29
    To feel what others feel: two episodes from 18th century medicine.Stewart Justman - 2011 - Medical Humanities 37 (1):34-37.
    In the late 18th century two medical fashions—Mesmerism in France and the Perkins ‘tractor’ in the USA and England—appealed to the principle that a single universal force acts on all of us and is responsible for health and illness. This principle served both fashions well, as it made it all the easier for those who came within their force fields to experience the sort of sensations that other subscribers to the fashion also seemed to feel. The first research on (...)
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  41.  41
    The Yemen in the 18th and 19th Centuries: A Political and Intellectual History.Jon E. Mandaville, Husayn B. ʿAbdullah al-ʿAmri & Husayn B. Abdullah al-Amri - 1989 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 109 (3):440.
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  42. Jonathan Edwards and 18th Century Religious Philosophy.Roger A. Ward - 2008 - In Cheryl Misak (ed.), The Oxford handbook of American philosophy. New York: Oxford University Press.
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  43.  5
    The 18th of October 1999: In Memoriam.Gladys González-Ramos - 2000 - Hastings Center Report 30 (4):28-33.
    The story of a Cuban‐American family and some lessons for patient care.
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  44. Physics and Astronomy in 18th Century Painting in the Context of Religious and Mythological Thinking of the Epoch.Агратина Е.Е - 2025 - Philosophy and Culture (Russian Journal) 1:40-51.
    The Age of Enlightenment was characterized by passionate scientific discussions, which involved not only scientists, but also representatives of various social circles. Sciences such as physics and astronomy are becoming a hobby and entertainment, scientific experiments are being conducted at home, friends and acquaintances are invited to conduct them, and amateur scientific courses are being organized. The article highlights how these processes were reflected in the painting of the XVIII century. Science is considered not only as a widespread subject in (...)
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  45.  59
    Diderot's Answer To The Problem Of Perception In The 18th Century Aesthetics.Ali Can Tural - 2024 - Dokuz Eylül University Journal of Humanities.
    The 18th century witnessed the transformation of aesthetics into an independent philosophical discipline. In this period, two main traditions emerged, based on which we can categorize aesthetic theorists. The first of these is classical or rationalist aesthetics, and the other is empiricist or subjective aesthetics. Because classical/rational aesthetic theories were largely based on Cartesian metaphysics, they also inherited the difficulties faced by Cartesian metaphysics. For Descartes, senseperception is not a reliable mode of cognition and truth only comes out of (...)
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  46.  18
    Popular knowledge in the 18th century almanacs.Joao Luis Lisboa - 1989 - History of European Ideas 11 (1-6):509-513.
  47. Proceedings of the 18th ACM Conference Companion on Computer Supported Cooperative Work & Social Computing.Markus Luczak-Roesch, Ramine Tinati, Kieron O'Hara & Nigel Shadbolt (eds.) - 2015
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  48.  54
    The Role of Education Redefined: 18th century British and French educational thought and the rise of the Baconian conception of the study of nature.Tal Gilead - 2011 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 43 (10):1020-1034.
    The idea that science teaching in schools should prepare the ground for society's future technical and scientific progress has played an important role in shaping modern education. This idea, however, was not always present. In this article, I examine how this idea first emerged in educational thought. Early in the 17th century, Francis Bacon asserted that the study of nature should serve to improve living conditions for all members of society. Although influential, Bacon's idea was not easily assimilated by educational (...)
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  49. Logic, Language and Meaning: 18th Amsterdam Colloquium.Maria Aloni, V. Kimmelman, Floris Roelofsen, G. Weidman Sassoon, Katrin Schulz & M. Westera (eds.) - 2012 - Springer.
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  50. English Thought in the 18th Century.Editor Editor - 1877 - Mind 2:352.
     
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