Results for 'Wilhelm Just'

939 found
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  1.  43
    Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz: Le Droit de La Raison.Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz - 1994 - Bibliotheque Des Textes Philos.
    La doctrine du Droit est du nombre de celles qui ne dependent pas des experiences mais des definitions, ni des demonstrations a partir des sens mais a partir de la raison et qui, pour ainsi dire, sont de droit et non de fait. Puisque la Justice consiste en effet en quelque convenance et proportion, il est possible de comprendre qu'il y ait quelque chose de juste, meme s'il n'y a personne qui exerce la justice ni sur lequel elle soit exercee, (...)
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  2.  26
    Glauben als Lebenskraft.Wilhelm Gräb - 2018 - International Yearbook for Tillich Research 13 (1):47-68.
    Tillich develops a non-intentional understanding of faith in his essay “The Courage to Be”. Just as the “ontological fear” belongs to the human being so also the act of faith which Tillich reinterprets with the concept of courage. Believing does not mean believing in God, but being able to live from the power of unconditional trust. This article makes it clear that for Tillich faith, understood as unconditional trust, is just as much a part of being human as (...)
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  3.  13
    1993.Wilhelm Radloff (ed.) - 1992 - De Gruyter.
    Philosophical discussions are the main focus of the Nietzsche-Studien. However, the reception of Nietzsche in other disciplines such as classical studies, literary studies or theology are also considered. The Nietzsche-Studien, therefore, serve not just the ideas of any one school or direction, but rather introduce various different approaches to interpreting Nietzsche. The yearbook publishes papers, essays, lectures, short articles, and reviews of selected publications about Nietzsche. Each volume is completed by a name index, an index of Nietzsche quotes and (...)
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  4.  29
    (3 other versions)Human, All Too Human.Friedrich Wilhelm Nietzsche - 1908 - New York: Cambridge University Press. Edited by R. J. Hollingdale.
    This remarkable collection of almost 1,400 aphorisms was originally published in three instalments. The first (now Volume I) appeared in 1878, just before Nietzsche abandoned academic life, with a first supplement entitled The Assorted Opinions and Maxims following in 1879, and a second entitled The Wanderer and his Shadow a year later. In 1886 Nietzsche republished them together in a two-volume edition, with new prefaces to each volume. Both volumes are presented here in R. J. Hollingdale's distinguished translation (originally (...)
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  5.  83
    Comparing the structures of mathematical objects.Isaac Wilhelm - 2021 - Synthese 199 (3-4):6357-6369.
    A popular method for comparing the structures of mathematical objects, which I call the ‘subset approach’, says that X has more structure than Y just in case X’s automorphisms form a proper subset of Y’s automorphisms. This approach is attractive, in part, because it seems to yield the right results in some comparisons of spacetime structure. But as I show, it yields the wrong results in a number of other cases. The problem is that the subset approach compares structure (...)
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  6. (4 other versions)Ecce homo.Friedrich Wilhelm Nietzsche & Raoul Richter - 1911 - Mineola, N.Y.: Dover Publications. Edited by Anthony M. Ludovici.
    Published posthumously in 1908, Ecce Homo was written in 1888 and completed just a few weeks before Nietzsche’s complete mental collapse. Its outrageously egotistical review of the philosopher’s life and works—featuring chapters called Why I Am So Wise and Why I Write Such Good Books—are redeemed from mere arrogance by masterful language and ever-relevant ideas. In addition to settling scores with his many personal and philosophical enemies, Nietzsche emphasizes the importance of questioning traditional morality, establishing autonomy, and making a (...)
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  7.  59
    Philosophy and Truth: Selections From Nietzsche's Notebooks of the Early 1870's.Friedrich Wilhelm Nietzsche - 1979 - Atlantic Highlands, N.J.: Humanity Books. Edited by Daniel Breazeale.
    Philosophy and Truth offers the first English translation of six unpublished theoretical studies written just after the publication of The Birth of Tragedy and simultaneously with Untimely Meditations. In addition to the texts themselves, which probe epistemological problems on philosophy's relation to art and culture, this book contains a lengthy introduction that provides the biographical and philological information necessary for understanding these often fragmentary texts. The introduction also includes a helpful discussion of Nietzsche's early views concerning culture, knowledge, philosophy, (...)
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  8.  17
    Jeremiah 23:23–24 as polemic against prophets’ views on Yahweh’s presence.Wilhelm Wessels - 2016 - HTS Theological Studies 72 (3):7.
    Jeremiah 23:23–24 is a short passage in the cycle of oracles in which the prophet Jeremiah is supposedly in conflict with other prophets in his society. It is possible that this short passage first had an independent existence before it became part of the collection of oracles in 23:9-40 This article argues that as an independent oracle the passage claims that Yahweh is not just a localised god, but an omnipresent God from whom no person can hide. When read (...)
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  9.  25
    Logical Propaedeutic: Pre-school of Reasonable Discourse.Wilhelm Kamlah, Paul Lorenzen & Hoke Robinson - 1984 - Lanham, MD and London: University Press of Amer.
    Presents for the first time in English, this 1967 text which came to be known as the 'bible' of a new movement in German philosophy of language, the 'Erlanger School.' This school of linguistic philosophy's treatment of language is rooted in the tradition of transcendentalism, and bases its system on Kant and his Continental successors. For the Erlanger School, 'language is not just a fact we discover...but a human cultural accomplishment whose construction reason can and should be controlled.' An (...)
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  10. (1 other version)Objects are (not) ...Friedrich Wilhelm Grafe - 2024 - Archive.Org.
    My goal in this paper is, to tentatively sketch and try defend some observations regarding the ontological dignity of object references, as they may be used from within in a formalized language. -/- Hence I try to explore, what properties objects are presupposed to have, in order to enter the universe of discourse of an interpreted formalized language. -/- First I review Frege′s analysis of the logical structure of truth value definite sentences of scientific colloquial language, to draw suggestions from (...)
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  11.  46
    Beyond the Great Story: History as Text and Discourse. [REVIEW]Wilhelm S. Wurzer - 1996 - Review of Metaphysics 50 (2):387-387.
    Robert F. Berkhofer, Jr. provides a basic, broad, and dynamic introduction to a new manner of reading history in light of current theoretical innovations and multiculturalist theories. In order to prepare the reader for this novel historicality, the author guides the reader through an enormous terrain of texts in modernism, poststructuralism, deconstruction, feminism, poetics, and multiculturalism. Just from this standpoint, one may regard Berkhofer's work as a major contribution to the history of contemporary thought. His text, however, exceeds writing (...)
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  12. The Ultimate Origin of Things.Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz - unknown
    Beyond the world, i.e. beyond the collection of finite things, there is some one being who rules, not only as the soul is the ruler in me (or, to put it better, as the self is the ruler in my body), but also in a much higher way. For the one being who rules the universe doesn’t just •govern the world but also •builds or makes it. He is above the world and outside it, so to speak, and therefore (...)
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  13.  26
    Political writings of Friedrich Nietzsche: an edited anthology.Friedrich Wilhelm Nietzsche - 2008 - New York: Palgrave-Macmillan. Edited by Frank Cameron & Don Dombowsky.
    Chulpforta, 1862 -- Napoleon III as president -- Saint-just -- Two-poem cycle two kings -- Louis the sixteenth -- Louis the fifteenth -- Agonistic politics, 1871-1874 -- The Greek state, 1871 -- On the future of our educational institutions, third lecture, February 27th, 1872 -- Homer's contest -- Untimely meditations -- David Strauss : the confessor and the writer, 1873 -- Schopenhauer as educator, 1874 -- The free spirit, 1878-1880 -- Human, all too human : a book for free (...)
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  14.  20
    Editorial.Gabriele Kern-Isberner & Wilhelm Rödder - 2006 - Logic Journal of the IGPL 14 (3):409-411.
    This special issue “Inferences and Information Processing in a Conditional Framework“ is dedicated to conditionals as central objects for inferencing and information processing. It presents selected revised papers of the Workshop on Conditionals, Information, and Inference, CII'04, held in Ulm, Germany, co-located with the German national conference on AI, KI'2004.Conditional statements If A then B carry a very special kind of information that can not be captured by interpreting them as material implications. Roughly speaking, the premise, A, provides a context (...)
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  15.  36
    Ecce homo: and The birth of tragedy.Friedrich Wilhelm Nietzsche - 1927 - New York: The Modern Library. Edited by Clifton Fadiman.
    Published posthumously in 1908, Ecce Homo was written in 1888 and completed just a few weeks before Nietzsche's complete mental collapse.
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  16.  13
    Lectures on the Philosophy of World History: Volume I: Manuscripts of the Introduction and the Lectures of 1822-1823.Peter Hodgson & Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel (eds.) - 2011 - New York: Oxford University Press UK.
    This edition makes available an entirely new version of Hegel's lectures on the development and scope of world history. Volume I presents Hegel's surviving manuscripts of his introduction to the lectures and the full transcription of the first series of lectures. These works treat the core of human history as the inexorable advance towards the establishment of a political state with just institutions-a state that consists of individuals with a free and fully-developed self-consciousness. Hegel interweaves major themes of spirit (...)
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  17.  26
    When deception becomes easy: the effects of task switching and goal neglect on the truth proportion effect.Bram Van Bockstaele, Christine Wilhelm, Ewout Meijer, Evelyne Debey & Bruno Verschuere - 2015 - Frontiers in Psychology 6:151121.
    Lying is typically more cognitively demanding than truth telling. Yet, recent cognitive models of lying propose that lying can be just as easy as truth telling, depending on contextual factors. In line with this idea, research has shown that the cognitive cost of deception decreases when people frequently respond deceptively, while it increases when people rarely respond deceptively (i.e., the truth proportion effect). In the present study, we investigated two possible underlying mechanisms of the truth proportion effect. In Experiment (...)
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  18. Oldest Systematic Program of German Idealism: Translation and Notes.Daniel Fidel Ferrer, Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel, Friedrich Wilhelm Joseph Schelling & Friedrich Hölderlin - 2021 - 27283 Verden, Germany: Kuhn von Verden Verlag.
    This book’s goal is to give an intellectual context for the following manuscript. -/- Includes bibliographical references and an index. Pages 1-123. 1). Philosophy. 2). Metaphysics. 3). Philosophy, German. 4). Philosophy, German -- 18th century. 5). Philosophy, German and Greek Influences Metaphysics. I. Hegel, Georg Wilhelm Friedrich -- 1770-1831 -- Das älteste Systemprogramm des deutschen Idealismus. II. Rosenzweig, Franz, -- 1886-1929. III. Schelling, Friedrich Wilhelm Joseph von, -- 1775-1854. IV. Hölderlin, Friedrich, -- 1770-1843. V. Ferrer, Daniel Fidel, 1952-. (...)
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  19.  10
    What Wilhelm Ostwald meant by “Autokatalyse” and its significance to origins‐of‐life research.Zhen Peng, Klaus Paschek & Joana C. Xavier - 2022 - Bioessays 44 (9):2200098.
    A closer look at Wilhelm Ostwald's articles that originally proposed the concept of autocatalysis reveals that he accepted reactants, not just products, as potential autocatalysts. Therefore, that a process is catalyzed by some of its products, which is the common definition of autocatalysis, is only a proper subset of what Ostwald meant by “Autokatalyse.” As a result, it is necessary to reconsider the definition of autocatalysis, which is especially important for origins‐of‐life research because autocatalysis provides an abiotic mechanism (...)
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  20.  57
    Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz: Sämtliche Schriften und Briefe.Christia Mercer - 2000 - The Leibniz Review 10:61-72.
    Working on Leibniz’s vast essays and texts can seem overwhelming. As exciting as it is to study the details of the Monadology and Discourse on Metaphysics, the Theodicy and the letters to Arnauld, it can be terrifying to sit back and think that there are thousands of other pages of equally sublime and often more difficult philosophical material. The personal notes are particularly daunting. Because Leibniz wrote these for himself, it is often difficult to grasp his reasoning and decipher his (...)
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  21.  19
    Zur Geschichte des Kaiser-Wilhelm-Instituts für physikalische Chemie und Elektrochemie. Zur geplanten Veränderung des Instituts in eine Forschungs- und Entwicklungsstätte des Heeres für den Gaskampf und Gasschutz auch in Friedenszeiten 1916 und nach 1933.Dietrich Stoltzenberg - 1991 - Berichte Zur Wissenschaftsgeschichte 14 (1):15-23.
    A Contribution to the History of the Kaiser Wilhelm Institute for Physical Chemistry and Electrochemistry: On Projected Changes of the Institute into a Research and Development Center of the Army for Chemical Warfare also in Times of Peace 1916 and after 1933. — The Kaiser Wilhelm Institute for Physics and Electrochemistry, today named after its first director Fritz-Haber-Institut, was in the first World War a place of research on chemical warfare. Evidences in the Archive for the History of (...)
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  22.  11
    They're Not Just Goddamn Trees.James Lawler - 2014 - In George A. Dunn (ed.), Avatar and Philosophy. Wiley. pp. 104–114.
    The title of the film Avatar specifically refers to the extension of the consciousness or spirit of a human individual into the body of an artificially created human–Na'vi hybrid. In his Philosophy of Nature, Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel argues that Nature is the embodiment – or, as we might say, the “avatar” – of what he calls the Absolute Spirit or God. Scientists, with their mechanistic models of nature, are essentially in league with the practical exploitation of the Earth. Their (...)
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  23.  10
    Understanding the I Ching: The Wilhelm Lectures on the Book of Changes.Cary F. Baynes & Irene Eber (eds.) - 1995 - Princeton University Press.
    The West's foremost translator of the I Ching, Richard Wilhelm thought deeply about how contemporary readers could benefit from this ancient work and its perennially valid insights into change and chance. For him and for his son, Hellmut Wilhelm, the Book of Changes represented not just a mysterious book of oracles or a notable source of the Taoist and Confucian philosophies. In their hands, it emerges, as it did for C. G. Jung, as a vital key to (...)
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  24.  12
    Hegel and the fundament of war in the being-for-itself. Reflections in relation with the just war.Michael Anthony Mayne-Nicholls Klenner - 2022 - Revista de Filosofía 20 (2):23-53.
    En la presente investigación se reflexionará sobre la guerra y su naturaleza en el contexto del sistema filosófico de Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel, estableciendo como su fundamento ontológico la categoría del ser-para-sí o autoafirmación, aquella necesidad de toda autoconciencia que pretende ser libre, y que se alcanza a través del proceso dialéctico del reconocimiento. Se contrastará esta concepción con la clásica noción de guerra justa planteada por Tomás de Aquino, examinando el lugar que la negatividad del mal tiene en (...)
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  25.  21
    Der Gelehrte bei Marsilius von Padua und Wilhelm von Ockham. Zur Abgrenzung von politischer und gelehrter Autorität in der Philosophie des 14. Jahrhunderts.Karl Ubl - 2012 - Das Mittelalter 17 (2):16-33.
    In ‘The Republic’, Plato famously reduced practical authority to theoretical authority, arguing that a just society must be governed by philosophers. This idea of the philosopher-king flourished in the medieval specula principum. The medieval papacy was grounded on a similar blend of practical and theoretical authority. The Pope was credited with the capacity to decide on the truth of beliefs because he was elected to office. In their fight against the omnicompetence of the Pope, Marsilius of Padua and William (...)
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  26.  25
    Handelnder Mensch und objektiver Geist. Zur Theorie der Geistes- und Sozialwissenschaften bei Wilhelm Dilthey. [REVIEW]B. J. - 1977 - Review of Metaphysics 30 (4):764-766.
    Since 1968 there has been a renewal of interest in Dilthey which has revealed new facets of his work and shown the need for a fundamental revision of the prevailing general conception of Dilthey. In 1968 Peter Krausser, in Kritik der endlichen Vernunft. Diltheys Revolution der allgemeinen Wissenschafts- und Handlungstheorie, brought out the connection between his epistemological and social-hermeneutic concerns by isolating a theory of functional structure running through his work which was seen as an anticipation of a cybernetic approach. (...)
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  27. The Expressivist Conception of Language and World: Humboldt and the Charge of Linguistic Idealism and Relativism.Jo-Jo Koo - 2007 - In Jon Burmeister & Mark Sentesy (eds.), On language: analytic, continental and historical contributions. Newcastle, UK: Cambridge Scholars Press. pp. 3-26.
    Wilhelm von Humboldt (1767-1835) is rightly regarded as a thinker who extended the development of the so-called expressivist conception of language and world that Johann Georg Hamann (1730-1788) and especially Johann Gottfried Herder (1744-1803) initially articulated. Being immersed as Humboldt was in the intellectual climate of German Romanticism, he aimed not only to provide a systematic foundation for how he believed linguistic research as a science should be conducted, but also to attempt to rectify what he saw as the (...)
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  28.  21
    Leibniz: A Very Short Introduction.Maria Rosa Antognazza - 2016 - Oxford, England: Oxford University Press UK.
    Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz was a man of extraordinary intellectual creativity who lived an exceptionally rich and varied intellectual life in troubled times. More than anything else, he was a man who wanted to improve the life of his fellow human beings through the advancement of all the sciences and the establishment of a stable and just political order. In this Very Short Introduction Maria Rosa Antognazza outlines the central features of Leibniz's philosophy in the context of his overarching (...)
  29.  93
    Leibniz and Newton on Space, Time and the Trinity.Paul Redding - 2011 - Journal of Philosophy: A Cross-Disciplinary Inquiry 7 (16):26-41.
    Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz, who was born in 1646 just before the end of the Thirty Years War and who died 1716, is surely one of the most bizarre and interesting of the early modern philosophers. He was an astonishing polymath, and responsible for some of the most advanced work in the sciences of his day—he was, for instance, the co-inventor along with Newton, of differential calculus, and is generally recognized as the greatest logician of the early modern period, (...)
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  30. Monadologism, Inter-subjectivity and the Quest for Social Order.Joseph O. Fashola & Francis Offor - 2020 - LASU JOURNAL OF PHILOSOPHY 3 (1):1-10.
    Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz presents the idea of monads, as non-communicative, self-actuating system of beings that are windowless, closed, eternal, deterministic and individualistic. For him, the whole universe and its constituents are monads and that includes humans. In fact, any ‘body’, such as the ‘body’ of an animal or man has, according to Leibniz, one dominant monad which controls the others within it. This dominant monad, he often refers to as the soul. If Leibniz’s conception of monads is accepted, it (...)
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  31.  22
    (1 other version)Les « intraduisibles » : question de langue ou de culture?Olga Inkova - 2010 - Hermès: La Revue Cognition, communication, politique 56 (1):145.
    Aujourd’hui, tout un courant de pensée a remis au goût du jour – et à juste titre – les écrits de Wilhelm von Humboldt sur les langues en tant que « visions du monde » singulières . C’est parce que chaque langue découpe l’univers à sa manière que l’intraduisibilité serait la caractéristique fondamentale de toute traduction, aucun mot ne correspondant exactement à aucun autre dans une autre langue. Une telle analyse n’est pas, en soi, fausse, mais elle demande à (...)
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  32.  23
    Leibniz on Corporeal Substance.Peeter Müürsepp - 2016 - Acta Baltica Historiae Et Philosophiae Scientiarum 4 (2):31-52.
    As an idealist, Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz could not recognize anything corporeal as substantial. However, under the influence of Cartesian terminology, he devoted considerable effort to analysing the corporeal world, while not recognizing its real substantiality of course. Leibniz took the concept of substance from Plato, Aristotle and the scholastics, but developed it in two ways. It is a well-known fact that Leibniz introduced the term ‘corporeal substance’ in his letter to Antoine Arnauld dated to October 1687. In the letter, (...)
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  33. Artworks as historical individuals.Guy Rohrbaugh - 2003 - European Journal of Philosophy 11 (2):177–205.
    In 1907, Alfred Stieglitz took what was to become one of his signature photographs, The Steerage. Stieglitz stood at the rear of the ocean liner Kaiser Wilhelm II and photographed the decks, first-class passengers above and steerage passengers below, carefully exposing the film to their reflected light. Later, in the darkroom, Stieglitz developed this film and made a number of prints from the resulting negative. The photograph is a familiar one, an enduring piece of social commentary, but what exactly (...)
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  34.  15
    (1 other version)Der phänomenologische Evidenzbegriff.Wilhelm Beimer - 1919 - Kant Studien 23 (1-3):269-301.
  35.  10
    Bücherverzeichnisse.Wilhelm vonHG Humboldt - 2014 - In Briefe Bis Zur Heirat. 1781 Bis Juni 1791. De Gruyter. pp. 611-612.
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  36.  6
    Die Arbeitsgemeinschaft philosophischer Editionen im 25 Jahr– Rückblick und Ausblick.Wilhelm Jacobs - 1998 - In Hans Gerhard Senger (ed.), Philologie Und Philosophie: Beiträge Zur Vii. Internationalen Fachtagung der Arbeitsgemeinschaft Philosophischer Editionen. Tübingen: De Gruyter. pp. 8-14.
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  37. Schelling - Édition historique critique.Wilhelm G. Jacobs - 1975 - Archives de Philosophie 38 (3):401.
     
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  38. Das Lebensgefüge der Musik: eine Gesamtheits-Erkenntnis ihrer Wirkungskräfte.Wilhelm Dörfler & Switzerland Dornach - 1975 - Dornach: Philosophisch-Anthroposophischer Verlag.
    1. Grundgestalt, Bewegung, Stufung.--[Beilage]: Musik-Beispiele.
     
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  39.  4
    Notebooks, 1924-1954.Wilhelm Furtwängler & Michael Tanner - 1989
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  40.  49
    Church Alonzo. Special cases of the decision problem. Revue philosophique de Louvain, Bd. 49 , S. 203–221.Wilhelm Ackermann - 1952 - Journal of Symbolic Logic 17 (1):73-74.
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  41.  55
    Fitch Frederic Brenton. Symbolic logic. An introduction. The Ronald Press Company, New York 1952, x + 238 S.Wilhelm Ackermann - 1952 - Journal of Symbolic Logic 17 (4):266-268.
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  42.  47
    Henkin Leon. An algebraic characterization of quantifiers. Fundamenta mathematicae, Bd. 37 , S. 63–74.Wilhelm Ackermann - 1951 - Journal of Symbolic Logic 16 (4):290-291.
  43.  32
    Umezawa Toshio. Über die Zwischensysteme der Aussagenlogik. Nagoya mathematical journal. Bd. 9 , S. 181–189.Wilhelm Ackermann - 1956 - Journal of Symbolic Logic 21 (3):324-325.
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  44.  11
    Nec impune C. Marius...: Zu tacitus' sicht der römischen erfolge gegen die germanen im 37. kapitel seiner,germania'.Jan-Wilhelm Beck - 1995 - Philologus: Zeitschrift für Antike Literatur Und Ihre Rezeption 139 (1):97-132.
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  45.  10
    Snorri Sturluson - Historiker, Dichter, Politiker.Heinrich Beck, Wilhelm Heizmann & Jan van Nahl (eds.) - 2013 - De Gruyter.
    Der isländische Historiker, Dichter und Politiker Snorri Sturluson war eine Ausnahmegestalt des nordischen Mittelalters. Die Beiträge international renommierter Forscher diskutieren den aktuellen Stand der Forschung und bringen selbst neue Ansätze ein. Dabei werden neben religionshistorischen und historischen Themen auch Fragen der Biographie, der Wissenschaftsgeschichte und der Textüberlieferung behandelt.
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  46.  19
    Das natürliche System der Geisteswissenschaften iin siebzehnten Jahrhundert.Wilhelm Dilthey - 1893 - Archiv für Geschichte der Philosophie 6 (2):225-256.
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  47. Le origini della visione storica del mondo di Niebuhr.Wilhelm Dilthey - 2003 - Archivio di Storia Della Cultura 16.
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  48.  11
    Le thé'tre de Délos et la scène du thé'tre grec.Wilhelm Doerpfeld - 1896 - Bulletin de Correspondance Hellénique 20 (1):563-580.
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  49. Apriorismus.Wilhelm Halbfass - 1971 - In . Schwabe.
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  50. Jahresbericht über die im Jahre 1886 erschienene Litteratur über die Philosophie seit Kant.Wilhelm Dilthey - 1888 - Archiv für Geschichte der Philosophie 1:122.
     
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