Results for 'scholastic philosophy of the 18th century'

948 found
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  1. Jonathan Edwards and 18th Century Religious Philosophy.Roger A. Ward - 2008 - In Cheryl Misak, The Oxford handbook of American philosophy. New York: Oxford University Press.
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  2.  9
    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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  3. 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 (...)
     
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  4.  39
    Was There a Downturn in Fifteenth-Century Scholastic Philosophy?Rudolf Schuessler - 2018 - Studia Neoaristotelica 15 (1):5-38.
    In the history of scholastic philosophy, the fifteenth century is traditionally regarded as a period of decay, a downturn between the heights of fourteenth-century nominalism and the Spanish revival of scholasticism in the sixteenth century. This paper sets out to challenge this received view. First, however, the received view is confirmed on the basis of sixteenth-century lists of ecclesiastical writers containing very few notable scholastic philosopher-theologians for the fifteenth century. On the other (...)
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  5.  14
    Neo-Thomism in action: law and society reshaped by neo-scholastic philosophy, 1880-1960.Wim Decock, Bart Raymaekers & Peter Heyrman (eds.) - 2021 - Leuven: Leuven University Press.
    In his encyclical 'Aeterni Patris' (1879), Pope Leo XIII expressed the conviction that the renewed study of the philosophical legacy of Saint Thomas Aquinas would help Catholics to engage in a dialogue with secular modernity while maintaining respect for Church doctrine and tradition. As a result, the neo-scholastic framework dominated Catholic intellectual production for nearly a century thereafter. This volume assesses the societal impact of the Thomist revival movement, with particular attention to the juridical dimension of this epistemic (...)
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  6.  44
    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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  7.  32
    Natural Philosophy through the 18th Century and Allied Topics. [REVIEW]G. L'. E. Turner - 1973 - British Journal for the History of Science 6 (4):447-448.
  8.  49
    Seventeenth-Century Scholastic Syllogistics. Between Logic and Mathematics?Miroslav Hanke - 2020 - Review of Symbolic Logic 13 (2):219-248.
    The seventeenth century can be viewed as an era of (closely related) innovation in the formal and natural sciences and of paradigmatic diversity in philosophy (due to the coexistence of at least the humanist, the late scholastic, and the early modern tradition). Within this environment, the present study focuses on scholastic logic and, in particular, syllogistic. In seventeenth-century scholastic logic two different approaches to logic can be identified, one represented by the Dominicans Báñez, Poinsot, (...)
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  9. Power, Harmony, and Freedom: Debating Causation in 18th Century Germany.Corey Dyck - forthcoming - In Frederick Beiser, Corey W. Dyck & Brandon Look, The Oxford Handbook of Eighteenth-Century German Philosophy. Oxford University Press.
    As far as treatments of causation are concerned, the pre-Kantian 18th century German context has long been dismissed as a period of uniform and unrepentant Leibnizian dogmatism. While there is no question that discussions of issues relating to causation in this period inevitably took Leibniz as their point of departure, it is certainly not the case that the resulting positions were in most cases dogmatically, or in some cases even recognizably, Leibnizian. Instead, German theorists explored a range of (...)
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  10. (1 other version)18th Century German Philosophy prior to Kant.Corey W. Dyck & Brigitte Sassen - forthcoming - Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
  11.  63
    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 (...)
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  12.  1
    Társiasság és tekintély: esztétikai politika a 18. századi Angliában [Sociability and Authority: Aesthetic Politics in 18th-Century Britain].Endre Szécsényi - 2002 - Budapest, Hungary: Osiris Kiadó.
    This monograph analyses the aesthetic dimensions of politics and political philosophy in 18th-century British thought, by focusing on Lord Shaftesbury, David Hume and Edmund Burke.
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  13.  8
    Text, history, and philosophy: Abhidharma across Buddhist scholastic traditions.Bart Dessein & Weijen Teng (eds.) - 2016 - Boston: Brill.
    In Text, History, and Philosophy. Abhidharma Across Buddhist Scholastic Traditions, the development of the Abhidharma genre in South and East Asia from the life time of the historical Buddha to the tenth century CE is discussed.
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  14.  55
    Jesuit Probabilistic Logic between Scholastic and Academic Philosophy.Miroslav Hanke - 2019 - History and Philosophy of Logic 40 (4):355-373.
    There is a well-documented paradigm-shift in eighteenth century Jesuit philosophy and science, at the very least in Central Europe: traditional scholastic version(s) of Aristotelianism were replaced by early modern rationalism (Wolff's systematisation of Leibnizian philosophy) and early modern science and mathematics. In the field of probability, this meant that the traditional Jesuit engagement with probability, uncertainty, and truthlikeness (in particular, as applied to moral theology) could translate into mathematical language, and can be analysed against the background (...)
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  15.  86
    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 (...)
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  16. 18th century German aesthetics.Paul Guyer - 2008 - Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
  17. Late-scholastic and Cartesian conatus.Rodolfo Garau - 2014 - Intellectual History Review 24 (4):479-494.
    Introduction Conatus is a specific concept within Descartes’s physics. In particular, it assumes a crucial importance in the purely mechanistic description of the nature of light – an issue that Des- cartes considered one of the most crucial challenges, and major achievements, of his natural phil- osophy. According to Descartes’s cosmology, the universe – understood as a material continuum in which there is no vacuum – is composed of a number of separate yet interconnected vortices. Each of these vortices consists (...)
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  18.  18
    Neo-scholastic essays.Edward Feser - 2015 - South Bend, Indiana: St. Augustine's Press.
    In a series of publications over the course of a decade, Edward Feser has argued for the defensibility and abiding relevance to issues in contemporary philosophy of Scholastic ideas and arguments, and especially of Aristotelian-Thomistic ideas and arguments. This work has been in the vein of what has come to be known as "analytical Thomism," though the spirit of the project goes back at least to the Neo-Scholasticism of the period from the late nineteenth century to the (...)
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  19.  32
    18th century French aesthetics.Jacques Morizot - 2008 - Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
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  20.  16
    Some reflections on translating scholastic philosophy.Alfred Freddoso - manuscript
    I would be scandalously remiss were I not to preface my remarks on translation with two expressions of gratitude to the Franciscan Institute. First of all, I am very pleased to have been invited to participate in this celebration of Ockham, not merely for professional reasons but also because I have thereby been afforded the opportunity to return to the Southerntier, as this part of New York State is known to those of us who trace our roots to the Buffalo (...)
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  21.  9
    Deafness, gesture and sign language in the 18th century French philosophy.Josef Fulka - 2020 - Philadelphia: John Benjamins.
    The book represents a historical overview of the way the topic of gesture and sign language has been treated in the 18th century French philosophy. The texts treated are grouped into several categories based on the view they present of deafness and gesture. While some of those texts obviously view deafness and sign language in negative terms, i.e. as deficiency, others present deafness essentially as difference, i.e. as a set of competences that might provide some insights into (...)
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  22.  48
    Newton and scholastic philosophy.Dmitri Levitin - 2016 - British Journal for the History of Science 49 (1):53-77.
  23.  9
    Lessons in scholastic philosophy.Michael W. Shallo - 1915 - Philadelphia,: P. Reilly; [etc., etc.].
    The book contains a systematical and very accurate introduction into the scholastic philosophy. It begins with part one containing logic and dialectic. Part two deals with metaphysics and ontology. Part three examines cosmology, followed by the fourth part which embraces rational psychology. Part five deals with natural theology. In spite of its systematic architecture the book exemplifies the skill of the author to write a very comprehendible text that can be read with profit by undergraduates.
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  24.  22
    Spinoza and Scholastic Philosophy.Emanuele Costa - 2021 - In Yitzhak Y. Melamed, A Companion to Spinoza. Hoboken, NJ: Wiley. pp. 47–55.
    Spinoza's writing style has been judged, by various commentators, alternatively as excessively dry or lavishly rich, depending on the precise text that these scholars had in mind when making such judgments. This chapter offers an overview of a selected list of Scholastic debates intersecting the CM. It highlights how Spinoza consciously intervenes in them, showing a certain awareness of the intricacies of Scholastic discourse. Spinoza opens the CM with a discussion of the term “being,” claiming that “being is (...)
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  25.  37
    Spinoza and Scholastic Philosophy.Emanuele Costa - 2021 - In Yitzhak Y. Melamed, Blackwell Companion to Spinoza. Hoboken, NJ: Blackwell.
    In the first section of this chapter, I offer an overview of a selected list of Scholastic debates intersecting Spinoza's Cogitata Metaphysica. I highlight how Spinoza consciously intervenes in them, showing a certain awareness of the intricacies of Scholastic discourse. In this first section, I emphasize Spinoza’s interest in three specific problems: the issue of the division of being into “real being” and “being of reason”; the eternity of God and its distinction from duration; and, finally, God’s omnipresence. (...)
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  26. Sentimental Hydraulics. Utopia and Technology in 18th Century France.Thomas Brandstetter - 2008 - In Claus Zittel, Philosophies of technology: Francis Bacon and his contemporaries. Boston: Brill. pp. 495--512.
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  27.  24
    An Introduction to Scholastic Philosophy[REVIEW]C. C. V. - 1956 - Review of Metaphysics 10 (2):372-372.
    De Wulf's work has been largely supplanted since its first appearance in 1903, but it is still of some use as an introduction and survey. This edition reprints the English translation of 1907. --V. C. C.
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  28.  33
    -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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  29.  27
    Language and thought: German approaches to analytic philosophy in the 18th and 19th centuries.Michael Benedikt - 1993 - History of European Ideas 17 (5):688-690.
  30.  16
    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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  31.  12
    A Comparative Study on In-mul-sung-dong-i-lon between Toegye scgool and Yulgok school in 18th century.NakJin Kim - 2009 - THE JOURNAL OF KOREAN PHILOSOPHICAL HISTORY 26:151-183.
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  32.  66
    From mysticism to skepticism: Stylistic reform in seventeenth-century british philosophy and rhetoric.Ryan J. Stark - 2001 - Philosophy and Rhetoric 34 (4):322-334.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Philosophy and Rhetoric 34.4 (2001) 322-334 [Access article in PDF] From Mysticism to Skepticism: Stylistic Reform inSeventeenth-century British Philosophy and Rhetoric Ryan J. Stark The idea of stylistic plainness captured the imaginations of philosophers in the seventeenth century. Francis Bacon's early attacks on "sweet falling clauses" and Thomas Sprat's invectives against "swellings of style" are especially quotable, and have been cited often by scholars from (...)
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  33. BEJCZY Istvan P. and Richard G. Newhauser (eds): Virtue and Ethics in the.Twelfth Century - 2006 - British Journal for the History of Philosophy 14 (1):199-203.
     
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  34.  28
    Understanding scholastic thought with Foucault.Philipp W. Rosemann - 1999 - New York: St. Martin's Press.
    In Understanding Scholastic Thought with Foucault, Philipp Rosemann provides a new introduction to Scholastic thought written from a contemporary and, notably, Foucauldian perspective. In taking inspiration from the methodology of historical research developed by Foucault, the book places the intellectual achievements of the thirteenth century, especially Thomas Aquinas, in a larger cultural and institutional framework. Rosemann’s analysis sees the Scholastic tradition as the process of the gradual reinscription of the Greek intellectual heritage into the center of (...)
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  35. Science as public culture: Chemistry and the Enlightenment in Britain, 1760–1820 (Cambridge, 1992); Simon Schaffer,“Natural philosophy and public spectacle in the 18th century”. [REVIEW]Jan Golinski - forthcoming - History of Science.
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  36.  57
    (1 other version)Early Scholastic Angelology.Marcia L. Colish - 1995 - Recherches de Theologie Et Philosophie Medievales 62:80-109.
    This paper surveys the doctrine on angels taught by theologians in the first century of scholasticism . This topic has received virtually no scholarly attention; but it is of interest for the light it sheds on the concerns of school theologians during this formative stage of their discipline. We can subdivide our target century into three parts, the first half of the twelfth century closing with the Sentences of Peter Lombard, the second half of the twelfth (...), and the first quarter of the thirteenth century. In the first of these three stages, scholastic theologians, for the first time, faced the challenge of creating a syllabus for the teaching of systematic theology and developed the sentence collection as their genre of choice for that purpose. The question of where to place angels within that context and genre, or even if they should be placed there at all, was the single most heavily debated topic on their angelological agenda. Another major matter on that agenda on which agreement reigned as to the desired outcome, although different masters proposed different itineraries to their common destination, was the felt need to refute Origen's claim that backsliding and conversion remained eternal options, so that Lucifer and the fallen angels might even be saved. Other issues that attracted attention had to do with the psychology of angels and their exercise of reason and will both before and after their fall or confirmation in glory. (shrink)
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  37.  19
    Reputation in a box. Objects, communication and trust in late 18th-century botanical networks.Sarah Easterby-Smith - 2015 - History of Science 53 (2):180-208.
    This paper examines how and why information moved or failed to move within transatlantic botanical networks in the late eighteenth century. It addresses the problem of how practitioners created relationships of trust, and the difficulties they faced in transferring reputations between national contexts. Eighteenth-century botany was characteristically cross-cultural, cosmopolitan and socially diverse, yet in the 1770s and 1780s the American Revolutionary Wars placed these attributes under strain. The paper analyses the British and French networks that surrounded the Philadelphian (...)
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  38. Philosophy in a New Century: Selected Essays.John R. Searle - 2008 - Cambridge University Press.
    John R. Searle has made profoundly influential contributions to three areas of philosophy: philosophy of mind, philosophy of language, and philosophy of society. This volume gathers together in accessible form a selection of his essays in these areas. They range widely across social ontology, where Searle presents concise and informative statements of positions developed in more detail elsewhere; artificial intelligence and cognitive science, where Searle assesses the current state of the debate and develops his most recent (...)
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  39. (1 other version)Moral Philosophy at Seventeenth Century Harvard: A Discipline in Transition.Norman Fiering - 1981 - Transactions of the Charles S. Peirce Society 18 (2):191-194.
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  40.  36
    Metaphysics: Aristotelian, Scholastic, Analytic.Lukás Novák, Daniel D. Novotný, Prokop Sousedík & David Svoboda (eds.) - 2012 - Ontos Verlag.
    Throughout the greater part of the twentieth century, both in the analytic and continental traditions, metaphysics was deemed to be passé. The last few decades, however, have witnessed a remarkable growth of interest among analytic philosophers in various traditional metaphysical topics, such as modality, truth, causality, etc. which resulted in the emergence of various forms of analytic metaphysics. The new forms of metaphysics differ from its traditional forms mostly in their methodology and in the range of proposed solutions to (...)
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  41.  41
    Seventeenth-century philosophy.Gordon Baker - 2000 - British Journal for the History of Philosophy 8 (2):353 – 373.
  42.  53
    (1 other version)Philosophy in a New Century.John R. Searle - 2003 - Journal of Philosophical Research 28 (9999):3-22.
    The central intellectual fact of the present era is that knowledge grows. This growth of knowledge is quietly transforming philosophy, making it possible to do a new kind of philosophy. With the abandonment of the epistemic bias in the subject, such a philosophy can go far beyond anything imagined by the philosophy of a half century ago. It begins, not with skepticism, but with what we know about the real world. It begins with such facts (...)
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  43.  23
    Ḥmēdān al-Shwēʿir. Arabian Satire: Poetry from 18th-Century Najd; and Ḥmēdān al-Shwēʿir. Arabian Satire: Poetry from 18th-Century Najd. [REVIEW]William Tamplin - 2022 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 141 (3).
    Ḥmēdān al-Shwēʿir. Arabian Satire: Poetry from 18th-Century Najd. Edited and translated by Marcel Kurpershoek. Library of Arabic Literature. New York: New York University Press, 2017. Pp. l + 198. $35. ʿAbdallāh Ibn Sbayyil. Arabian Romantic: Poems on Bedouin Life and Love. Edited and translated by Marcel Kurpershoek. Library of Arabic Literature. New York: New York University Press, 2018. Pp. li + 311. $35.
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  44.  48
    Kant’s Experiential Enlightenment and Court Philosophy in the 18th Century.Holly L. Wilson - 2001 - History of Philosophy Quarterly 18 (April 2001):179-205.
    Christian Thomasius and his school, including Andreas Rüdiger and Christian Crusius influenced Kant in the development of his Pragmatic Anthropology. They all shared a common concern that philosophy ought to be useful to students who have a role to play in the world.
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  45. Women and Philosophy in Eighteenth-Century Germany.Corey Dyck (ed.) - 2021 - Oxford: Oxford University Press.
    Women and Philosophy in 18th Century Germany gathers for the first time an exceptional group of scholars with the explicit aim of composing a comprehensive portrait of the complex and manifold contributions on the part of women in 18th century Germany. Amidst the re-evaluation of the place of women in the history of early Modern philosophy, this vital and distinctive intellectual context has thus far been missing. As this volume will show, women intellectuals contributed (...)
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  46.  34
    Land and Ruler in Old Bavaria, 16th to 18th Centuries. [REVIEW]Friedrich-Wilhelm Henning - 1991 - Philosophy and History 24 (1-2):67-68.
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  47.  18
    A Fourteenth Century Scholastic Miscellany.Pearl Kibre - 1941 - New Scholasticism 15 (3):261-271.
  48.  55
    German Culture and Philosophy in Mid-Nineteenth-Century Ohio.Loyd D. Easton - 1994 - The Personalist Forum 10 (1):29-45.
  49.  22
    Medicine and Philosophy: A Twenty-First Century Introduction.Ingvar Johansson & Niels Lynøe - 2008 - Ontos Verlag.
    This textbook introduces the reader to basic problems in the philosophy of science and ethics, mainly by means of examples from medicine. It is based on the conviction that philosophy, medical science, medical informatics, and medical ethics are overlapping disciplines. It claims that the philosophical lessons to learn from the twentieth century are not that nature is a 'social construction' and that 'anything goes' with respect to methodological and moral rules. Instead, it claims that there is scientific (...)
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  50.  79
    Chinese and Buddhist philosophy in Early Twentieth-Century German thought.Eric Sean Nelson - 2017 - London: Bloomsbury.
    Presenting a comprehensive portrayal of the reading of Chinese and Buddhist philosophy in early 20th-century German thought, Chinese and Buddhist Philosophy in early Twentieth-Century German Thought examines the implications of these readings for contemporary issues in comparative and intercultural philosophy. Through a series of case studies from the late 19th-century and early 20th-century, Eric Nelson focuses on the reception and uses of Confucianism, Daoism, and Buddhism in German philosophy, covering figures as diverse (...)
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