Results for 'philosophy of dreaming'

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  1. The philosophy of dreaming and self-consciousness: What happens to the experiential subject during the dream state?Jennifer Michelle Windt & Thomas Metzinger - 2007 - In Deirdre Barrett & Patrick McNamara (eds.), The New Science of Dreaming Vol 3: Cultural and Theoretical Perspectives. Praeger Publishers/Greenwood Publishing Group. pp. 193-247.
  2.  45
    Philosophy of dreams.Christoph Turcke - 2013 - New Haven: Yale University Press.
    div A sweeping reconstruction of human consciousness and its breakdown, from the Stone Age through modern technology/DIV.
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  3.  10
    Philosophy of Dreams.Susan H. Gillespie (ed.) - 2013 - Yale University Press.
    Why has humankind developed so differently from other animals? How and why did language, culture, religion, and the arts come into being? In this wide-ranging and ambitious essay, Christoph Türcke offers a new answer to these timeworn questions by scrutinizing the phenomenon of the dream, using it as a psychic fossil connecting us with our Stone Age ancestors. Provocatively, he argues that both civilization and mental processes are the results of a compulsion to repeat early traumas, one to which hallucination, (...)
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  4.  17
    New perspectives on Old Testament oneirocritic texts via the philosophy of dreaming.Jaco Gericke - 2019 - HTS Theological Studies 75 (3):6.
    Recourse to auxiliary disciplines has greatly contributed to the ways in which biblical scholars seek to elucidate various dimensions of meaning in textual constructions of dreams and dreaming in the Old Testament. The original contribution this article hopes to make to the ongoing research on associated oneirocritic topoi is to propose the so-called philosophy of dreaming as a potential dialogue partner to supplement already available perspectives within the multidisciplinary discussion. At present, there is no descriptive philosophical approach (...)
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  5.  57
    Śaṅkara’s philosophy of dreaming: Constructing an unreal world.Neil Dalal - 2022 - Asian Philosophy 32 (4):398-419.
    This article analyzes Śaṅkara’s use of dreaming in Advaita Vedānta. For Śaṅkara, dreaming functions philosophically as a direct phenomenal inquiry into mind and consciousness. Dreaming also functions as a syllogistic illustration. While dreaming, we experience unreal objects that do not exist apart from our minds. Dreaming thus illustrates the waking world’s nonrealism despite perceiving it as real, and that waking objects are consciousness alone. However, the dream illustration raises several questions: In what ways does illusory (...)
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  6.  19
    Repetition compulsion as primum movens of religion? On Christoph Türcke’s Philosophy of Dreams.Vittorio Hösle - 2022 - Neue Zeitschrift für Systematicsche Theologie Und Religionsphilosophie 64 (2):141-160.
    SummaryThe essay exposes, recognizes the astonishing originality, and showcases the shortcomings of Christoph Türcke’s Philosophy of Dreams, which offers a theory of the origin of religion inspired by both psychoanalysis and critical theory. Among the objections raised are the speculative nature of the enterprise, which is not sufficiently based on empirical data, the lack of knowledge concerning the transition from apes to humans, the impossibility for hallucinations to be the basic doxastic act, the exaggerated focus on dread, which is (...)
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  7.  89
    Imagining a Way Out of Dream Skepticism.Daniel Gregory - 2024 - Erkenntnis 89 (8):2967-2984.
    The problem of dream skepticism – i.e., the problem of what can justify one’s belief that they are not dreaming – is one of the most famous problems in philosophy. I propose a way of responding to the problem which is available if one subscribes to the theory that the sensory experiences that we have in dreams consist of images (as opposed to false percepts). The response exploits a particular feature of imagination, viz., that it is not possible (...)
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  8.  1
    The Awakening of the Soul and the Sleep of the Spirit: Hegel’s Philosophy of Dreams.Andrés Ortigosa - 2024 - Filozofia 79 (7):768-782.
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  9. Dreaming: a conceptual framework for philosophy of mind and empirical research.Jennifer Michelle Windt - 2015 - London, England: MIT Press.
    A comprehensive proposal for a conceptual framework for describing conscious experience in dreams, integrating philosophy of mind, sleep and dream research, and interdisciplinary consciousness studies. Dreams, conceived as conscious experience or phenomenal states during sleep, offer an important contrast condition for theories of consciousness and the self. Yet, although there is a wealth of empirical research on sleep and dreaming, its potential contribution to consciousness research and philosophy of mind is largely overlooked. This might be due, in (...)
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  10.  13
    An analysis of dream in Indian philosophy.Satyajit Layek - 1990 - Delhi, India: Sri Satguru Publications.
  11.  12
    Thomas Jefferson's philosophy of education: a utopian dream.Mark Holowchak - 2014 - New York, NY: Routledge.
    Thomas Jefferson had a profoundly advanced educational vision that went hand in hand with his political philosophy - each of which served the goal of human flourishing. His republicanism marked a break with the conservatism of traditional non-representative governments, characterized by birth and wealth and in neglect of the wants and needs of the people. Instead, Jefferson proposed social reforms which would allow people to express themselves freely, dictate their own course in life, and oversee their elected representatives. His (...)
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  12.  56
    Precis of Dreaming: A Conceptual Framework for Philosophy of Mind and Empirical Research.J. M. Windt - 2018 - Journal of Consciousness Studies 25 (5-6):6-29.
  13. Of Dreams, Demons, and Whirlpools: Doubt, Skepticism, and Suspension of Judgment in Descartes's Meditations.Jan Forsman - 2021 - Dissertation, Tampere University
    I offer a novel reading in this dissertation of René Descartes’s (1596–1650) skepticism in his work Meditations on First Philosophy (1641–1642). I specifically aim to answer the following problem: How is Descartes’s skepticism to be read in accordance with the rest of his philosophy? This problem can be divided into two more general questions in Descartes scholarship: How is skepticism utilized in the Meditations, and what are its intentions and relation to the preceding philosophical tradition? -/- I approach (...)
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  14.  73
    Dream pluralism: a philosophy of the dreaming mind.Melanie Gillespie Rosen - 2013 - Dissertation, Macquarie University
  15. The Interpretation of Dreams.Jim Hopkins - 2006 - In Jerome Neu (ed.), The Cambridge Companion to Freud. Cambridge University Press.
    Freud's account of dreams has a cogent interpretive basis.
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  16. The Teleological Significance of Dreaming in Aristotle.Mor Segev - 2012 - Oxford Studies in Ancient Philosophy 43:107-141.
    In his discussions of dreaming in the Parva Naturalia, Aristotle neither claims nor denies that dreams serve a natural purpose. Modern scholarship generally interprets dreaming as useless and teleologically irrelevant for him. I argue that Aristotle's teleology permits certain types of dream to have a natural role in end-directed processes. Dreams are left-overs from waking experience, but they may, like certain bodily residues, be used by nature, which does ‘nothing in vain’ and makes use of available resources, for (...)
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  17.  32
    The Problem of Dreams.Roger Squires - 1973 - Philosophy 48 (185):245 - 259.
    1. The scientific study of sleep has recently been stimulated by comparisons between people and advanced computers, whose normal activities need to be suspended periodically for reprogramming. I quote from a popular account by Dr Christopher Evans, which appeared in the Sunday Times during 1969: Sleep is of course the state in which the brain-computer is ‘off-line’, during which time the vast mass of existing programmes are sorted, outdated ones revised in the light of recent experiences and useless ones or (...)
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  18.  64
    The Routledge Handbook of Philosophy of Temporal Experience: Routledge Handbooks in Philosophy.Ian Phillips (ed.) - 2017 - New York: Routledge.
    Experience is inescapably temporal. But how do we experience time? Temporal experience is a fundamental subject in philosophy – according to Husserl, the most important and difficult of all. Its puzzles and paradoxes were of critical interest from the Early Moderns through to the Post-Kantians. After a period of relative neglect, temporal experience is again at the forefront of debates across a wealth of areas, from philosophy of mind and psychology, to metaphysics and aesthetics. The Routledge Handbook of (...)
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  19.  68
    The Interpretation of Dreams.Sigmund Freud & A. A. Brill - 1900 - Journal of Philosophy, Psychology and Scientific Methods 10 (20):551-555.
  20.  66
    Waking, Dreaming, Being: Self and Consciousness in Neuroscience, Meditation, and Philosophy.Evan Thompson & Stephen Batchelor - 2014 - New York: Cambridge University Press.
    A renowned philosopher of the mind, also known for his groundbreaking work on Buddhism and cognitive science, Evan Thompson combines the latest neuroscience research on sleep, dreaming, and meditation with Indian and Western philosophy of the mind, casting new light on the self and its relation to the brain. Thompson shows how the self is a changing process, not a static thing. When we are awake we identify with our body, but if we let our mind wander or (...)
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  21.  33
    Fields of Dreams and Men of Straw: Philosophical Reflections on Performance-Enhancers In Sport.Klaus V. Meier - 1991 - Journal of the Philosophy of Sport 18 (1):74-85.
  22.  22
    Living the Dream of Martin Luther King, Jr.: A Philosophy of Education.Ronald David Glass - 2022 - Philosophy of Education 78 (2):1-28.
  23. (1 other version)How the Dreaming Soul Became the Feeling Soul, between the 1827 and 1830 Editions of Hegel’s Philosophy of Subjective Spirit.Jeffrey Reid - 1987 - In Eric von der Luft (ed.), Hegel's Philosophy of Spirit. pp. 37-54.
    Why does Hegel change “Dreaming Soul” to “Feeling Soul” in the 1830 edition of the Philosophy of Subjective Spirit? By tracing the content of the Dreaming Soul section, through Hegel’s 1794 manuscript on psychology, to sources such as C.P. Moritz’s Magazin zur Erfahrungsseelenkunde, the paper shows how the section embraces a late Enlightenment mission: combating supposedly supernatural expressions of spiritual enthrallment by explaining them as pathological conditions of the soul. Responding to perceived attacks on the 1827 edition (...)
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  24.  28
    The psychology of dreams.M. A. Fortune - 1926 - Australasian Journal of Psychology and Philosophy 4 (2):119-140.
    Find out all about dreams and you will know all about insanity. ?Hughlings Jackson.
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  25.  40
    Mental elements of dreams.Will S. Monroe - 1905 - Journal of Philosophy, Psychology and Scientific Methods 2 (24):650-652.
  26.  36
    The World of Dreams. [REVIEW]E. F. O’Doherty - 1959 - Philosophical Studies (Dublin) 9:262-263.
    This little essay of Bergson’s was originally delivered as a lecture to the Institut Psychologique in 1901, and published the same year in the Revue Scientifique. The date is significant: it was the year after Freud’s great work, The Interpretation of Dreams, was published. Bergson’s lecture came therefore at the end of the era of the old introspective psychologists, and before the new depth theories had become the commonplace they now are. So Bergson can state: “There is nothing mysterious about (...)
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  27. Freud, Bion and Kant : epistemology and anthropology in The interpretation of dreams.Stella Sandford - 2017 - International Journal of Psychoanalysis 98 (1):91-110.
    This interdisciplinary article takes a philosophical approach to The Interpretation of Dreams, connecting Freud to one of the few philosophers with whom he sometimes identified - Immanuel Kant. It aims to show that Freud's theory of dreams has more in common with Bion's later thoughts on dreaming than is usually recognized. Distinguishing, via a discussion of Kant, between the conflicting 'epistemological' and 'anthropological' aspects of The Interpretation of Dreams, it shows that one specific contradiction in the book - concerning (...)
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  28.  40
    On Ascertaining the Stuff of Dreams: Nāgārjuna's Madhyamaka and Taktsang Lotsawa's Interpretation.Thomas H. Doctor - 2020 - Philosophy East and West 70 (2):285-302.
    As a Madhyamaka philosopher, Taktsang Lotsawa Sherab Rinchen 1 is perhaps most widely known for his claim to have identified eighteen major contradictions in the thought of Tsongkhapa Losang Drakpa, a polemic discussion that appears in the Madhyamaka chapter of his encyclopedic Freedom from Extremes through Comprehensive Knowledge of Philosophy.2 In this article we will not pursue this critique, both renowned and infamous, but instead focus on Taktsang Lotsawa's own pragmatic hermeneutics of emptiness in context. Taktsang Lotsawa argues that (...)
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  29.  17
    A Hermeneutic and Rhetoric of Dreams.Cyd C. Ropp - 2000 - Janus Head 3 (1):3-1.
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  30.  17
    The war of dreams: exercises in ethno-fiction.Marc Augé - 1999 - Sterling, Va.: Pluto Press.
    Continues Augé's critical exploration of contemporary modernity with an examination of the role of dreams, myth and fiction in the age of satellite TV and the Internet.
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  31.  12
    Metaphors and the Intelligibility of Dreams.C. Mason Myers - 1969 - Philosophy and Rhetoric 2 (2):91 - 99.
  32.  10
    The Psychology of Dreams.R. F. Fortune - 1926 - Australasian Journal of Philosophy 4 (2).
  33.  11
    Freud's Theory of Dreams: A Philosophico-Scientific Perspective.Michael T. Michael - 2015 - Rowman & Littlefield.
    Michael T. Michael evaluates Freud s theory of dreams in light of major criticisms and scientific research. Approaching the issue from the vantage of the history and philosophy of science, he argues that the theory is a live hypothesis fully deserving of continued scientific exploration.".
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  34.  80
    Like a Ribbon of Dreams: New York Film Festival 2006 Report (Part One).Martha P. Nochimson - 2006 - Film-Philosophy 10 (3):50-62.
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  35. Philosophy of Film: An Introduction.Aaron Smuts - 2016 - Routledge.
    Philosophy of Film: A Contemporary Introduction (Routledge) provides a critical overview of the literature on eleven different issues in the philosophy of film, from "What is Film?" to "Can Film Do Philosophy?" It aims to provide an objective overview of the principal arguments on each side of the issues. The set of issues includes all of the most important topics as well as some that are less well represented in the discipline, such as whether the power of (...)
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  36.  69
    Psychoanalytic Semiotics and the Interpretation of Dream Paintings.Tim-Hung Ku - 2007 - American Journal of Semiotics 23 (1-4):303-336.
    The present paper is divided into two parts. Part one is an attempt to reconstruct the semiotic models of Freudian-Lacanian psychoanalysis, in which conceptsfrom De Saussure, C. S. Peirce, Jakobson, Lotman, Eco are drawn for mutual illumination and synthesis. Psychoanalytic semiotics is considered a particular areaand discipline in semiotics, aiming at the unconscious dimension of the subject. Lacan could be considered a post-structuralist revision and extension of Freud. Part two is an application of psychoanalytic semiotics to the interpretation of dream (...)
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  37.  53
    Précis of Waking, Dreaming, Being: Self and Consciousness in Neuroscience, Meditation, and Philosophy.Evan Thompson - 2016 - Philosophy East and West 66 (3):927-933.
    The central idea of Waking, Dreaming, Being is that the self is a process, not a thing or an entity.1 The self isn’t something outside experience, hidden either in the brain or in some immaterial realm. It is an experiential process that is subject to constant change. We enact a self in the process of awareness, and this self comes and goes depending on how we are aware.When we’re awake and occupied with some manual task, we enact a bodily (...)
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  38. Dreaming of a stable world: vision and action in sleep.Melanie Rosen - 2019 - Synthese 198 (17):4107-4142.
    Our eyes, bodies, and perspectives are constantly shifting as we observe the world. Despite this, we are very good at distinguishing between self-caused visual changes and changes in the environment: the world appears mostly stable despite our visual field moving around. This, it seems, also occurs when we are dreaming. As we visually investigate the dream environment, we track moving objects with our dream eyes, examine objects, and shift focus. These movements, research suggests, are reflected in the rapid movements (...)
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  39. (1 other version)The Routledge Companion to Philosophy of Psychology.Sarah Robins, John Symons & Paco Calvo (eds.) - 2009 - New York, NY: Routledge.
    _The Routledge Companion to Philosophy of Psychology, Second Edition_ is an invaluable guide and major reference source to the major topics, problems, concepts and debates in philosophy of psychology and is the first companion of its kind. A team of renowned international contributors provide forty-nine chapters organised into six clear parts: Historical background to Philosophy of Psychology Psychological Explanation Cognition and Representation The biological basis of psychology Perceptual Experience Personhood. _The Companion_ covers key topics such as the (...)
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  40.  66
    (1 other version)The dream of reason: a history of western philosophy from the Greeks to the Renaissance.Anthony Gottlieb - 2000 - New York: W.W. Norton.
    Already a classic in its first year of publication, this landmark study of Western thought takes a fresh look at the writings of the great thinkers of classic philosophy and questions many pieces of conventional wisdom. The book invites comparison with Bertrand Russell's monumental History of Western Philosophy, "but Gottlieb's book is less idiosyncratic and based on more recent scholarship" (Colin McGinn, Los Angeles Times). A New York Times Notable Book, a Los Angeles Times Best Book, and a (...)
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  41. The spirit of the school of principles in Zhu Xi’s discussion of “Dreams”—And on “Confucius did not Dream of Duke Zhou”.Yu Chang - 2010 - Frontiers of Philosophy in China 5 (1):94-110.
    Dreams were a topic of study even in ancient times, and they are a special spiritual phenomenon. Generations of literati have defined the meaning of dreams in their own way, while Zhu Xi was perhaps the most outstanding one among them. He made profound explanations of dreams from aspects such as the relationship between dreams and the principles li and qi, the relationship between dreams and the state of the heart, and the relationship between dreams and an individual’s moral improvement. (...)
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  42. Primacy of Consciousness and Enactive Imagination. Review of Waking, Dreaming, Being: Self and Consciousness in Neuroscience, Meditation and Philosophy by Evan Thompson.E. Solomonova - 2015 - Constructivist Foundations 10 (2):267-270.
    Upshot: This interdisciplinary work draws on phenomenology, Indian philosophy, Tibetan Buddhism, cognitive neurosciences and a variety of personal and literary examples of conscious phenomena. Thompson proposes a view of consciousness and self as dynamic embodied processes, co-dependent with the world. According to this view, dreaming is a process of spontaneous imagination and not a delusional hallucination. This work aims at laying the ground for systematic neurophenomenological investigation of first-person experience.
     
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  43. The Philosophy of Illumination.John Walbridge & Hossein Ziai (eds.) - 2000 - Brigham Young University.
    Shihäb al-Din al-Suhrawardi was born around 1154, probably in northwestern Iran. Spurred by a dream in which Aristotle appeared to him, he rejected the Avicennan Peripatetic philosophy of his youth and undertook the task of reviving the philosophical tradition of the "Ancients." Suhruwardi's philosophy grants an epistemological role to immediate and atemporal intuition. It is explicitly anti-Peripatetic and is identified with the pre-Aristotelian sages, particularly Plato. The subject of his _hikmat al-Ishraq_—now available for the first time in English—is (...)
     
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  44.  21
    The World of Dreams. [REVIEW]P. R. - 1959 - Review of Metaphysics 12 (4):662-662.
    In this popular essay, Bergson presents the view that the indistinct sensations of the disinterested dreamer serve to choose those memories which will come from the unconscious. The translation is easy and accurate.--R. P.
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  45.  64
    Dreaming: A conceptual framework for philosophy of mind and empirical research. [REVIEW]Doğan Erişen - 2018 - Philosophical Psychology 31 (1):150-154.
  46.  40
    The Philosophy of the Young Kant: The Precritical Project (review). [REVIEW]Kevin Zanelotti - 2001 - Journal of the History of Philosophy 39 (3):443-445.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Journal of the History of Philosophy 39.3 (2001) 443-445 [Access article in PDF] Martin Schönfeld. The Philosophy of the Young Kant: The Precritical Project. New York: Oxford University Press, 2000. Pp. xv + 348. Cloth, $55.00. Kant's precritical philosophy has often been judged as lacking continuity, originality, and, indeed, philosophical relevance. Martin Schönfeld's impressive new study disputes this assessment, claiming instead that "the philosophy of (...)
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  47.  6
    Anthropology after metaphysicsin the philosophy of Bruno Latour.Елена Петриковская - 2023 - Philosophical Anthropology 9 (1):145-159.
    Under the influence of science, technology and global changes, the pathos of caring for a person today is transferred to non-human communities. Sensitivity to matter and its changing states has returned to philosophy. Nature is again considered as a universal model of everything that exists. A new value has become the world in all its diversity, the world itself, unlimited by the phenomenon of man. To think in a new way is to think on the other side of a (...)
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  48.  67
    Contingency and the "time of the dream": Kuki shūzō and French prewar philosophy.Thorsten Botz-Bornstein - 2000 - Philosophy East and West 50 (4):481-506.
    There are many links between Kuki Shūzō and the French philosophy of the 1920s that treated the phenomenon of contingency. Examined are (1) the problem of time as it presented itself to French philosophers at the beginning of the twentieth century and its reception by Kuki as an Oriental philosopher and a Buddhist; (2) the problem of liberty and of existence in these French philosophers and in Buddhism; and (3) the phenomenon of the dream as a psychic and aesthetic (...)
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  49.  29
    Albert the Great on the Materiality of Dreams in De homine.Andrei Bereschi & Vlad Ile - 2023 - Quaestio 23:137-161.
    Late ancient and early medieval narratives often depict dreaming as a vertical and hierarchical process of influence that has its starting point in a higher entity and ends with the human being. This model of explanation seems to take a more horizontal approach with the advent of a new natural philosophy and medical works from Arabic milieu that put the psychosomatic processes of the human being into perspective. The general purpose of this paper is to assess to which (...)
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  50.  49
    An Odd Coupling: Nietzsche and W.E.B. Du Bois on 21st Century Philosophy of Education.Charles C. Verharen - 2021 - Studies in Philosophy and Education 41 (2):211-225.
    This essay contrasts Nietzsche’s remarks on elite education with W.E.B. Du Bois’ demand for democratized education. The essay takes their remarks as springboards for a twenty-first century philosophy of education rather than an historical account of their philosophies. Both thinkers cultivated Kant and Hegel’s dream that the spirit of freedom guided by reason would unite all the world’s peoples. Both held that education was key to realizing the dream. Their judgments about qualifying for education separated them. Nietzsche insisted that (...)
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