The Philosophy Book
239 Leisure time, for Russell, should no longer be spent merely recovering from work. On the contrary, it should constitute the ...
240 See also: Plato 50–55 ■ Blaise Pascal 124–25 ■ Edmund Husserl 224–25 T he German philosopher Max Scheler belongs to the phil ...
241 See also: Søren Kierkegaard 194–95 ■ Friedrich Nietzsche 214–21 ■ Martin Heidegger 252–55 ■ Hans-Georg Gadamer 260–61 ■ Hann ...
242 LIFE IS A SERIES OF COLLISIONS WITH THE FUTURE JOSE ORTEGA Y GASSET (1883–1955) IN CONTEXT BRANCH Ontology APPROACH Existent ...
243 See also: René Descartes 116–23 ■ Immanuel Kant 164–71 ■ Edmund Husserl 224–25 ■ Martin Heidegger 252–55 ■ Jean-Paul Sartre ...
244 IN CONTEXT BRANCH Ethics APPROACH Phenomenology BEFORE 5th century BCE Socrates claims that he is wise because he knows he i ...
245 The Buddha Amitabha, here shown between Kannon (Compassion) and Seishi (Wisdom), is the principal buddha of the Pure Land sc ...
THE LIMITS OF MY LANGUAGE ARE THE LIMITS OF MY WORLD LUDWIG WITTGENSTEIN (1889–1951) ...
...
248 philosophical tradition that stems from the 18th-century German philosopher Immanuel Kant. In The Critique of Pure Reason, K ...
249 discussion and disagreement is based on some fundamental errors in how we go about thinking and talking about the world. Log ...
250 LUDWIG WITTGENSTEIN Logic is not a body of doctrine but a mirror-image of the world. Ludwig Wittgenstein might be related. W ...
THE MODERN WORLD 251 Philosophy demands logical, unambiguous language. Wittgenstein concludes, therefore, that it can only be ma ...
252 WE ARE OURSELVES THE ENTITIES TO BE ANALYZED MARTIN HEIDEGGER (1889–1976) IN CONTEXT BRANCH Ontology APPROACH Phenomenology ...
253 See also: Plato 50–55 ■ Diogenes of Sinope 66 ■ Edmund Husserl 224–25 ■ Hans-Georg Gadamer 260–61 ■ Ernst Cassirer 337 ■ Jea ...
254 MARTIN HEIDEGGER We try to make sense of the world by engaging with projects and tasks that lend life a unity. Being human, ...
255 All being is a “being-towards-death”, but only humans recognize this. Our lives are temporal, and it is only once we realize ...
256 See also: Søren Kierkegaard 194–95 ■ Friedrich Nietzsche 214–21 ■ Nishida Kitaro 336–37 ■ Hajime Tanabe 244–45 ■ Martin Heid ...
257 See also: Gottlob Frege 336 ■ Ludwig Wittgenstein 246–51 ■ Karl Popper 262–65 ■ Willard Van Orman Quine 278–79 ■ Thomas Kuhn ...
258 See also: Plato 50–55 ■ Karl Marx 196–203 ■ Theodor Adorno 266–67 ■ Roland Barthes 290–91 T he German philosopher Walter Ben ...
«
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
»
Free download pdf