Results for 'publishing in exile'

958 found
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  1.  54
    (1 other version)Wittgenstein in Exile.James Carl Klagge - 2010 - MIT Press.
    Ludwig Wittgenstein's _Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus_ and _Philosophical Investigations_ are among the most influential philosophical books of the twentieth century, and also among the most perplexing. Wittgenstein warned again and again that he was not and would not be understood. Moreover, Wittgenstein's work seems to have little relevance to the way philosophy is done today. In _Wittgenstein in Exile_, James Klagge proposes a new way of looking at Wittgenstein -- as an exile -- that helps make sense of this. Wittgenstein's (...) was not, despite his wanderings from Vienna to Cambridge to Norway to Ireland, strictly geographical; rather, Klagge argues, Wittgenstein was never at home in the twentieth century. He was in exile from an earlier era -- Oswald Spengler's culture of the early nineteenth century. Klagge draws on the full range of evidence, including Wittgenstein's published work, the complete Nachlaß, correspondence, lectures, and conversations. He places Wittgenstein's work in a broad context, along a trajectory of thought that includes Job, Goethe, and Dostoyevsky. Yet Klagge also writes from an analytic philosophical perspective, discussing such topics as essentialism, private experience, relativism, causation, and eliminativism. Once we see Wittgenstein's exile, Klagge argues, we will gain a better appreciation of the difficulty of understanding Wittgenstein and his work. (shrink)
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  2.  10
    Publishing in the Republic of Letters: The Ménage-Grævius-Wetstein Correspondence, 1679-1692.Richard G. Maber - 2005 - Rodopi.
    This book prints for the first time two remarkable interlocking sequences of letters between Paris and the Netherlands: 40 letters from Gilles Ménage in Paris to Johann-Georg Grævius in Utrecht, and 30 from the printer Henrik Wetstein, in Amsterdam, to Ménage. Their principal focus is the publication of a considerable number of Ménage's works outside France, above all his monumental edition of Diogenes Laertius's Lives of the Philosophers. The letters give an engaging picture of mutual help within the community of (...)
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  3. A bibliography of works published by Estonian scholars in exile 1945-1973: psychology, pedagogics, and philosophy.Teodor Künnapas - 1974 - Stockholm: Estonian Scientific Institute [Box 7238].
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  4.  9
    A Viennese Library in Exile: Otto Neurath and the Heritage of Central European Culture in the Anglo-Saxon World.Friedrich Stadler - 2019 - In Adam Tuboly & Jordi Cat (eds.), Neurath Reconsidered: New Sources and Perspectives. Cham: Springer Verlag. pp. 23-44.
    Otto Neurath experienced an adventurous as well as dangerous life. Already in his childhood, he was fascinated by his father’s huge library. He was especially impressed by images and illustrations since Ancient times and the French Encyclopédie, which inspired his lifelong dealing with picture language. This became manifest with the founding of his “Social and Economic Museum of Vienna” and the invention of his “Vienna Method of Pictorial Language,” later on renamed ISOTYPE. In the flourishing period of “Red Vienna” he (...)
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  5.  11
    Cultural transfer in Swedish exile.Irene Nawrocka - 2023 - Nordisk judaistik/Scandinavian Jewish Studies 34 (1):66-81.
    After the death in 1934 of his father-in-law Samuel Fischer, founder of the well-known publishing house S. Fischer in Berlin, Gottfried Bermann Fischer moved to Vienna with the aim of publishing the works of prominent German-speaking Jewish and non-Jewish authors who could no longer publish in National Socialist Germany. After the ‘Anschluss’ to Nazi Germany in March 1938 he fled to Sweden with help from Karl Otto and Tor Bonnier, heads of Albert Bonniers Förlag. Eagerly observed by the (...)
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  6.  6
    In this hour: Heschel's writings in Nazi Germany and London exile.Abraham Joshua Heschel - 2019 - Philadelphia: Jewish Publication Society. Edited by Susannah Heschel, Helen C. Plotkin, Stephen Lehmann & Marion Faber.
    This first English publication of selected German writings by Abraham Joshua Heschel written during his years in Nazi Germany and London exile reveals his insights on the redemptive role of Jewish learning"--Provided by the publisher.
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  7.  34
    Kelsen's Theory on International Law during His Exile in Geneva.Mario G. Losano - 2015 - Ratio Juris 28 (4):470-485.
    Kelsen's monistic theory of international law was shaped during his exile in Geneva, but its deep roots are to be found in his Pure Theory of Law, centred on the neo-Kantian notion of “system.” According to this conception, a legal system can only descend from a single principle. Consequently, Kelsen constructed a monistic theory of law, i.e., a legal system incorporating all norms into a pyramidal structure culminating in a single principle: the fundamental norm. This Kelsenian pyramid must also (...)
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  8.  16
    Anti-Fascist Exile, Political Print Media, and the Variable Tactics of the Communists in Mexico (1939–1946) - The Case of Hannes Meyer and Lena Meyer-Bergner. [REVIEW]Sandra Neugärtner - 2023 - History of Communism in Europe 11:41-78.
    This article deals with the role of the political print media popular with communists in Mexico when anti-fascism became the code for the behaviour of democratic forces in the face of the provocation of Hitler’s fascism. Under the facade of anti-fascist unity, the German-speaking communist exiles established a publishing culture, from which Hannes Meyer and Lena Meyer-Bergner, who had come to Mexico from Soviet exile and who committed themselves to proletarian internationalism, soon separated or were excluded. Independent of (...)
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  9.  24
    Anti-Semitism and Critical Social Theory: The Frankfurt School in American Exile.John Abromeit - 2013 - Theory, Culture and Society 30 (1):140-151.
    Ziege’s book focuses primarily on the two main empirical studies carried out by Max Horkheimer’s Institute of Social Research during its exile in the United States in the 1940s: a relatively unknown and never-published study of anti-Semitism among American workers and the much better known, five-volume Studies in Prejudice. Ziege poses and successfully answers the question of why the Institute began to focus more on empirical studies and anti-Semitism in the 1940s. Her thorough archival research illuminates as never before (...)
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  10.  13
    Is a planet happier than a star? Cosmopolitanism in Plutarch's On Exile.Jan Opsomer - 2002 - In Philip Stadter & Luc Van der Stockt (eds.), Sage and Emperor. Plutarch, Greek Intellectuals, and Roman Power in the Time of Trajan (98-117 A.D. Leuven University Press.
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  11.  12
    Philosophy in Russia: from Herzen to Lenin and Berdyaev.Frederick Charles Copleston - 1986 - Notre Dame, Ind., USA: University of Notre Dame.
    Philosophy in Russia covers its subject broadly and in detail from the eighteenth century to Lenin and beyond into the post-Stalin period. It offers a continuous history of the development of philosophical thought in Russia, and portraits of individual and influential thinkers. The author devotes careful analysis to radicals such as Bakunin, Herzen, Chernyshevsky and Lavrov, and to the Marxists such as Plekhanov and Lenin. He also discusses the thought of writers such as Kireevsky, Leontiev and Solovyev, and examines the (...)
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  12.  22
    Molecular Revolution in Brazil.Karel Clapshow & Brian Holmes (eds.) - 2007 - Semiotext(E).
    Molecular Revolution in BrazilFélix Guattari and Suely Rolniktranslated by Karel Clapshow and Brian HolmesYes, I believe that there is a multiple people, a people of mutants, a people of potentialities that appears and disappears, that is embodied in social, literary, and musical events.... I think that we're in a period of productivity, proliferation, creation, utterly fabulous revolutions from the viewpoint of this emergence of a people. That's molecular revolution: it isn't a slogan or a program, it's something that I feel, (...)
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  13.  49
    The Exile of Literature: Poetry and the Politics of the Other.Bruce F. Murphy - 1990 - Critical Inquiry 17 (1):162-173.
    The marginality of poetry in American culture has been taken for granted at least since the dawn of the modernist period, when Walt Whitman printed his first volume of poetry at his own expense. More recently, it has become an article of faith that there is a real popular audience for poetry, but somewhere else-in the East. Literary journals, the popular press, and publishers have made household names of a handful of Eastern European writers: Czeslaw Milosz, Joseph Brodsky, Zbigniew Herbert. (...)
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  14. «The Ground Rots Equally Everywhere»: Federica Montseny and those who Returned to Die in the Francoist Spain.Pedro García-Guirao - 2013 - In Sharif Gemie & Scott Soo (eds.), Coming Home? Vol. 1: Conflict and Return Migration in the Aftermath of Europe’s. Cambridge: Cambridge Scholars Publishing. pp. 70-88.
    On 6 January 1963, the same day as Spanish children were excitedly waking up to discover their presents from the Three Wise Men, the well. known Spanish anarchist and former Minister of Health, Federica Montseny, published an emotionally charged and nostalgic article in the Spanish anarchist exilic periodical L'Espoir. In the article, entitled "The New Year", Montseny reflected a similar sense of expectation as she asked rhetorically for something she had been expecting for twenty-four years: "What is the greatest fortune (...)
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  15.  71
    Spinoza in Denmark and the Fall of Struensee, 1770-1772.John Christian Laursen - 2000 - Journal of the History of Ideas 61 (2):189-202.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Journal of the History of Ideas 61.2 (2000) 189-202 [Access article in PDF] Spinoza in Denmark and the Fall of Struensee, 1770-1772 John Christian Laursen * Baruch (Benedict) de Spinoza was the arch-heretic of the late seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. He was denounced in half a dozen languages from the time he began to publish until at least the 1780s, when Lessing's allegiance to Spinoza became the heart of (...)
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  16.  23
    Im Bann der Utopie. Ernst Blochs Hoffnungsphilosophie in der DDR-Literatur by Verena Kirchner.Sonja Fritzsche - 2017 - Utopian Studies 28 (2):374-379.
    Unlike the man, Ernst Bloch's philosophy of hope continued to influence select East German cultural intellectuals significantly long after his departure in 1961. Bloch himself left for West Germany following the construction of the Berlin Wall. After the end of World War II, he had returned from his New York exile by invitation in 1948 to accept the chair of philosophy at the University of Leipzig. While in exile, this friend of Bertolt Brecht, Walter Benjamin, and Theodor Adorno (...)
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  17.  79
    Essays on Realism.Georg Lukacs (ed.) - 1983 - MIT Press.
    Originally published in the 1930s, these essays on realism, expressionism, and modernism in literature present Lukacs's side of the controversy among Marxist writers and critics now known as the Lukacs-Brecht debate. The book also includes an exchange of letters between Lukács, writing in exile in the Soviet Union, and the German Communist novelist, Anna Seghers, in which they discuss realism, the European literary heritage, and the situation of the artist in capitalist culture.
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  18.  35
    Edgar Zilsel’s Research Programme: Unity of Science as an Empirical Problem.Diederich Raven & Jutta Schickore - 2003 - In Friedrich Stadler, Arne Naess, Paolo Parrini, Anita Von Duhn, David Jalal Hyder & Hubert Schleichert (eds.), The Vienna Circle and Logical Empiricism: Re-evaluation and Future Perspectives. Springer Verlag. pp. 225-234.
    The unity of science movement was itself far from unified. There may have been unity on the rallying call for a unity of science but that is as far as it went. Not only was there disagreement among the main protagonists on what was meant by the unity of science, but also on how to achieve it. In this paper I shall deal with Edgar Zilsel’s (1891-1944) conception. It represents an interesting break with the more programmatic approaches of Carnap, Neurath; (...)
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  19.  24
    Molecular Revolution in Brazil.Felix Guattari & Suely Rolnik - 2007 - Semiotext(E).
    Molecular Revolution in BrazilFélix Guattari and Suely Rolniktranslated by KarelClapshow and Brian HolmesYes, I believe that there is a multiple people, a people of mutants, apeople of potentialities that appears and disappears, that is embodied in social, literary, andmusical events.... I think that we're in a period of productivity, proliferation, creation, utterlyfabulous revolutions from the viewpoint of this emergence of a people. That's molecular revolution:it isn't a slogan or a program, it's something that I feel, that I live....--from MolecularRevolution in (...)
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  20.  1
    The Place and Role of Ali Bey Huseynzade in the History of Modern Azerbaijani Social-Philosophical Thought.Sevinj Misirkhanova - 2024 - Metafizika 7 (4):213-226.
    Ali Bey Huseynzade, one of the prominent representatives of Azerbaijan's literary, cultural, social-political, and philosophical thought in the 20th century, was the first publisher of the political-Turkism movement in Azerbaijan. He was a distinguished political figure, talented scientist, thinker, and publicist, and holds a unique place in the history of the Azerbaijani people. Over time, there is an increasing need to deeply comprehend and study the magnificent artistic works created by Ali Bey Huseynzade. Throughout his life, Huseynzade dedicated his prolific (...)
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  21.  1
    Tyranny, Despotism, and Consent in Marsiglio of Padua’s Defensor pacis.has Published in Excess of 100 Journal Articles, Guillaume Bogiaris, Edward Elgar, The Rope, the Chains: Machiavelli’S. Early Thought, Its Transformations Books/Rowman & Littlefield - forthcoming - The European Legacy:1-18.
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  22. In-Between: Latina Feminist Phenomenology, Multiplicity, and the Self.Mariana Ortega - 2016 - SUNY Press.
    Draws from Latina feminism, existential phenomenology, and race theory to explore the concept of selfhood. This original study intertwining Latina feminism, existential phenomenology, and race theory offers a new philosophical approach to understanding selfhood and identity. Focusing on writings by Gloría Anzaldúa, María Lugones, and Linda Martín Alcoff, Mariana Ortega articulates a phenomenology that introduces a conception of selfhood as both multiple and singular. Her Latina feminist phenomenological approach can account for identities belonging simultaneously to different worlds, including immigrants, exiles, (...)
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  23.  32
    José Gaos, Eduardo Nicol, and the criticism of cybernetics in Mexico.José Manuel Iglesias Granda & Antolín Sánchez Cuervo - 2024 - History of European Ideas 50 (3):466-484.
    Based on published works and unpublished materials, this article analyses how cybernetics was received by two Spanish thinkers exiled in Mexico: José Gaos (1900–1969) and Eduardo Nicol (1907–1990). This reception is particularly intriguing especially when considering the substantial presence and social impact that Norbert Wiener had in Mexican society because of his friendship with Arturo Rosenblueth. Gaos and Nicol are the first philosophers to develop a complex and original diagnosis of cybernetics in Mexico. It will be shown how the exiled (...)
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  24.  17
    E. H. Gombrich in 1968: Methodological Individualism and the Contradictions of Conservatism.Andrew Hemingway - 2009 - Human Affairs 19 (3):297-303.
    E. H. Gombrich in 1968: Methodological Individualism and the Contradictions of Conservatism The commonalities Gombrich affirmed between his own positions on science, politics, and art and those of his friend Karl Popper are key to understanding both his work on the history of style and the conservative fulminations on method he published from the early 1950s onwards. United with Popper by their shared experience of exile from fascism, Gombrich failed to register the amateurish character of Popper's political theory and (...)
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  25.  20
    Chios entre Athènes et Sparte. La contribution des exilés de Chios à l'effort de guerre lacédémonien pendant la Guerre du Péloponnèse. IG V 1, 1 + (SEG XXXIX 370). [REVIEW]Marcel Piérart - 1995 - Bulletin de Correspondance Hellénique 119 (1):253-282.
    The new fragment IG V 1, 1 published by A. Matthaiou and Y. Pikoulas (Ηόρος 7 [1989], p. 77-124) makes it possible to re-examine the relations of Chios with Athens and Sparta during the Peloponnesian War. The identification of the Chian exiles who contributed to the Lacedaemonian war chest as the same ones whom the admirai Cratesippidas returned to their island in about 409 enables the inscription to be assigned to the period of the Ionian War, a context that throws (...)
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  26.  17
    Judaism in Music and Other Essays.Richard Wagner - 1995 - U of Nebraska Press.
    Musical genius, polemicist, explosive personality-that was the nineteenth-century German composer Richard Wagner, who paid as much attention to his reputation as to his genius. Often maddening, and sometimes called mad, Wagner wrote with the same intensity that characterized his music. The letters and essays collected in Judaism in Music and Other Essays were published during the 1850s and 1860s, the period when he was chiefly occupied with the creation of The Ring of the Nibelung. Highlighting this collection is the notorious (...)
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  27.  63
    (2 other versions)Africana womanism: reclaiming ourselves.Clenora Hudson-Weems - 1994 - Troy, Mich.: Bedford Publishers.
    First published in 1993, this is a new edition of the classic text in which Clenora Hudson-Weems sets out a paradigm for women of African descent. Examining the status, struggles and experiences of the Africana woman forced into exile in Europe, Latin America, the United States or at Home in Africa, the theory outlines the experience of Africana women as unique and separate from that of some other women of color, and, of course, from white women. Differentiating itself from (...)
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  28.  17
    “A la sombra de los nopales crueles”. Víctor Serge, América Latina y la revista Babel.Claudio Albertani - 2015 - Revista de Humanidades de Valparaíso 4:7-20.
    The article reviews the life and work of Victor Serge. It focuses on his Mexican exile and themes that marked his writings, especially those published in the journal Babel during his “chilean period”.
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  29.  12
    Edgar Zilsels „Sozialismus 1943“ im Kontext.Christian Fleck - 2021 - Deutsche Zeitschrift für Philosophie 69 (5):836-857.
    In the summer of 1943 Edgar Zilsel resigned from his membership in the exile organization of Austrian Social Democrats, a political movement he had joined as a young man back in Vienna. Zilsel is known as an innovative scholar bridging philosophy, history and sociology of science, and belonging to the so-called left wing of the Vienna Circle of Logical Emipricism. Details of his political convictions are less recognized. A recently detected manuscript illuminates his worldview: His resignation letter had been (...)
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  30.  14
    The Open Society and its Enemies: Hegel and Marx.Karl Popper - 2002 - Routledge.
    Written in political exile during the Second World War and first published in 1945, Karl Popper's The Open Society and Its Enemies is one of the most influential books of the twentieth century. Hailed by Bertrand Russell as a 'vigorous and profound defence of democracy', its now legendary attack on the philosophies of Plato, Hegel and Marx exposed the dangers inherent in centrally planned political systems. Popper's highly accessible style, his erudite and lucid explanations of the thought of great (...)
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  31.  33
    Leibniz.André Robinet - 1967 - Journal of the History of Philosophy 5 (4):477-478.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:370 HISTORY OF PHILOSOPHY Leibniz. By Edmondo Clone. (Napoli : Libreria scientifica editrice. Pp. 540. L.4.000.) L'ouvrage d'E. Cione est une presentation d'ensemble de l'oeuvre de Leibniz. L'auteur situe d'abord Leibniz dans son milieu culturel et dans son ambiance historique. Puis il aborde les probl~mes relatifs ~ la monade et ~ l'univers. Une troisi~me partie traite du choix divin, du real et des possibles. La quatri~me s'attache au difficile (...)
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  32.  29
    Time in exile: in conversation with Heidegger, Blanchot, and Lispector.Marcia Sá Cavalcante Schuback - 2020 - Albany: State University of New York Press.
    This book is a philosophical reflection on the experience of time from within exile. Its focus on temporality is unique, as most literature on exile focuses on the experience of space, as exile involves dislocation, and moods of nostalgia and utopia. Marcia Sá Cavalcante Schuback proposes that in exile, time is experienced neither as longing back to the lost past nor as wanting a future to come but rather as a present without anchors or supports. She (...)
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  33.  64
    Dostoevsky and Schiller: National renewal through aesthetic education.Susan McReynolds - 2004 - Philosophy and Literature 28 (2):353-366.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Dostoevsky and Schiller:National Renewal Through Aesthetic EducationSusan McReynoldsDostoevsky's novels pivot upon scenes of spiritual transformation, moments of revelation that resolve dilemmas for which no logical solution can be found. Raskolnikov, for example, analyzes his crime from philosophical and sociological angles until he almost dies; he is saved by his dream of the plague and by the image of Sonia's face. When insight and progress come to Dostoevsky's fictional characters, (...)
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  34.  39
    From Papers to Newspapers: Miguel Masriera (1901–1981) and the Role of Science Popularization under the Franco Regime.Agustí Nieto-Galan - 2013 - Science in Context 26 (3):527-549.
    ArgumentThis paper analyzes the political dimension of Miguel Masriera's (1901–1981) science popularization program. In the 1920s, Masriera worked at the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology (ETH) in Zurich – with Hermann Staudinger, the luminary of polymer chemistry – to later become a lecturer of theoretical and physical chemistry at the University of Barcelona. After living in exile in Paris, at the end of the Civil War he returned to Spain but never recovered his position. Instead, Masriera became an active (...)
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  35. Cocceius and the Jewish Commentators.Adina M. Yoffie - 2004 - Journal of the History of Ideas 65 (3):393-398.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Cocceius and the Jewish CommentatorsAdina M. YoffieThe case of Johannes Cocceius defies the commonplace that Leiden University (and perhaps post-Reformation, confessionalized Europe in general) turned away from humanist scholarship in the first quarter of the seventeenth century. In 1650 Cocceius (1603-69), a Bremen-born Oriental philology professor at Franeker, joined the Leiden theological faculty and wrote a treatise, Protheoria de ratione interpretandi sive introductio in philologiam sacram (De ratione). He (...)
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  36. (1 other version)The Open Society and its Enemies.Karl R. Popper - 1945 - Princeton: Routledge. Edited by Alan Ryan & E. H. Gombrich.
    ‘If in this book harsh words are spoken about some of the greatest among the intellectual leaders of mankind, my motive is not, I hope, to belittle them. It springs rather from my conviction that, if our civilization is to survive, we must break with the habit of deference to great men.’ - Karl Popper, from the Preface Written in political exile during the Second World War and first published in two volumes in 1945, Karl Popper’s _The Open Society (...)
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  37. How Not to Be at Home in One’s Home: Adorno’s Critique of Architectural Reason.Matt Waggoner - 2019 - Architecture Philosophy 4 (1).
    Adorno wrote prolifically about modernism in culture and the arts, but little has been written about whether or in what form he might have addressed architectural concerns. The project of exploring this potentially fruitful intersection has been helped in the last couple of decades by authors from philosophy and critical theory contrasting his ideas about dwelling with Heidegger’s and by architectural theorists considering the import of his aesthetic theory.1 If these fall shy of the more immediate connections to architecture that (...)
     
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  38.  34
    " We all love with the same part of the body, don't we?": Iuliia Voznesenskaia's Zhenskii Dekameron, New Women's Prose, and French Feminist Theory.Yelena Furman - 2009 - Intertexts 13 (1):95-114.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:“We all love with the same part of the body, don’t we?”Iuliia Voznesenskaia’s Zhenskii Dekameron, New Women’s Prose, and French Feminist TheoryYelena Furman (bio)Starting out as a poet who eventually turned to fiction, Iuliia Voznesenskaia was also one of the main figures of the Soviet feminist movement, a fact that makes her biography both unusual and courageous. In the 1970s, Voznesenskaia’s involvement with the dissident movement in Leningrad resulted (...)
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  39.  15
    Hermann Levin Goldschmidt and the Futurology of an Uncertain Future.Nils Roemer - 2023 - Philosophy Today 67 (3):595-603.
    This article discusses Hermann Levin Goldschmidt’s philosophical work, first published in 1976 as within the context of the field of futurology. Whereas his historical work seeks to restore a legacy that the Holocaust destroyed, his philosophical argument against the futurologists reclaims the future from the realms of forecasting and planning. Goldschmidt gains this unique philosophical position on the future from the perspective of German Jewish philosophers and scholars who shaped his historical work. The intersection of different lines of inquiry and (...)
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  40.  30
    Present Trends of French Philosophical Thought: Introduction.Paola Zambelli - 1998 - Journal of the History of Ideas 59 (3):521-530.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Present Trends of French Philosophical ThoughtAlexandre Koyré and Paola ZambelliThe paper that is published here for the first time was read to the Graduate Faculty of the New School for Social Research by Alexandre Koyré, probably during one of his first trips to the United States as a visiting professor in the fall of 1946 or in the fall of 1950. 1 Given its content and the secondary literature (...)
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  41.  16
    The Winter is Over: Writings on Transformation Denied, 1989-1995.Giuseppe Caccia, Isabella Bertoletti, James Cascaito & Andrea Casson (eds.) - 2013 - Semiotext(E).
    Automation and information technology have transformed the organization of labor to such an extent that the processes of exploitation have moved beyond the labor class and now work upon society as a whole. If this displacement has destroyed the political primacy of the labor class, it has not, however, eliminated exploitation; rather, it has broadened it, implanting it within the given conditions of the most diverse spheres of society. -- from The Winter Is Over In late 1995, in opposition to (...)
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  42.  37
    At the Mind’s Limits and German-Jewish Symbiosis: Or, Améry on Guilt and the Possibility of Redemption.Robert Erlewine - 2016 - Journal of French and Francophone Philosophy 24 (3):140-156.
    At the 50 th anniversary of the Jean Améry’s Jenseits von Schuld und Sühne: Bewältigungsversuche eines Überwältigten, published in English as At the Mind’s Limits: Contemplations By a Survivor on Auschwitz and its Realities, this work is garnering increased attention in the Anglophone world. Perhaps it should not be surprising that there is increased interest in this book at this moment when our attention is repeatedly drawn to the plight of immigrants and exiles, state sanctioned use of torture, and police (...)
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  43.  33
    Співпраця михайла грушевського з українцями москви на початку XX століття.Hryhorii Serhiichuk - 2016 - Схід 4 (144):73-78.
    Scientific and journalistic activities Hrushevskyi had an impact on the activation of Ukrainian national movement, not only for ethnic territory of Ukraine but also among the Ukrainian community in Moscow and St. Petersburg. For example, in 1910 the Ukrainian Moscow invited Hrushevskyi to the presidium of the Ukrainian section of society Slavic culture. Contacts between Hrushevskyi and representatives of the colony intensified after the appearance of Ukrainian colonies on the plans Russian special edition of the magazine on Ukrainian issues. Discovered (...)
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  44.  18
    Hdt. 1.64.3: Ἀλκμεωνίδεω or Ἀλκμεωνιδέων.Matthew Pj Dillon - 2014 - Hermes 142 (2):129-142.
    Two hundred and fifty years ago in A. D. 1763, the learned and brilliant German philologist PETRUS WESSELING published in Amsterdam his magisterial edition of the Greek text of Herodotos. His text became very influential and was the basis of nearly all later editions, with his emendations and readings adopted without question over the coming decades and eventually centuries. Many of these were the product of his deep knowledge of Greek history. But at 1.64.3, WESSELING emended the reading of all (...)
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    (1 other version)Briefe: 1903–1975.Rainer Rochlitz - 1986 - Telos: Critical Theory of the Contemporary 1986 (69):196-200.
    Bloch's correspondence, published the year of his hundredth birthday, evokes a period of German philosophy which today seems forever gone. In exile in Switzerland at the outbreak of WWI, Czechoslovakia and the United States during die Nazi period and in bodi Germanies after 1945, Bloch epitomized an extraordinary symbiosis of the Jewish and the German spirits. Benjamin, Adorno, and Bloch were assimilated Jews unaware of their identity (or difference) except dirough the disdainful look of others. They saw themselves primarily (...)
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    A Cascading Waterfall of Nectar (review).Francis V. Tiso - 2008 - Buddhist-Christian Studies 28:191-199.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Reviewed by:A Cascading Waterfall of NectarFrancis V. TisoA Cascading Waterfall of Nectar. By Thinley Norbu. Boston: Shambhala, 2006. 312 pp.It is important to make a number of things clear about the work under review before proceeding to a discussion of the parts of the book that bear directly on Buddhist-Christian relations. In the first place, the reader should know the identity of the author, Thinley Norbu. In order to (...)
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  47. The Open Society and its Enemies: The Spell of Plato.Karl Popper - 2002 - Routledge.
    Written in political exile during the Second World War and first published in 1945, Karl Popper's The Open Society and Its Enemies is one of the most influential books of the twentieth century. Hailed by Bertrand Russell as a 'vigorous and profound defence of democracy', its now legendary attack on the philosophies of Plato, Hegel and Marx exposed the dangers inherent in centrally planned political systems. Popper's highly accessible style, his erudite and lucid explanations of the thought of great (...)
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  48.  6
    Fear of Freedom.Stanislao G. Pugliese & Adolphe Gourevitch (eds.) - 2008 - Cambridge University Press.
    Carlo Levi was a painter, writer, and antifascist Italian from a Jewish family, and his political activism forced him into exile for most of the Second World War. While in exile, he wrote _Christ Stopped at Eboli_, a memoir, and _Fear of Freedom_, a philosophical meditation on humanity's flight from moral and spiritual autonomy and our resulting loss of self and creativity. Brooding on what surely appeared to be the decline, if not the fall of Europe, Levi locates (...)
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  49.  13
    Fear of Freedom.Carlo Levi (ed.) - 2008 - Columbia University Press.
    Carlo Levi was a painter, writer, and antifascist Italian from a Jewish family, and his political activism forced him into exile for most of the Second World War. While in exile, he wrote _Christ Stopped at Eboli_, a memoir, and _Fear of Freedom_, a philosophical meditation on humanity's flight from moral and spiritual autonomy and our resulting loss of self and creativity. Brooding on what surely appeared to be the decline, if not the fall of Europe, Levi locates (...)
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    Alfred Schutz and Aron Gurwitsch at the New School for Social Research.Benita Luckmann - 2016 - Schutzian Research 8:17-35.
    This never published paper by Benita Luckmann describes the ori­gins and uniqueness of the New School for Social Research. It portrays Alfred Schutz’s arrival in the United States, his reasons for working at the New School, his exchange with Talcott Parsons, the debate over his presentation of the Stranger in the General Seminar, and his many efforts to recruit Aron Gurwitsch to the New School. It also provides an account of Gurwitsch’s experience of life in exile, his friendship with (...)
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